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Book review: House of Gold

Madeleine Kingsley enjoys dynastic life woven from rich prose

June 22, 2018 10:21
natalie solomons
1 min read

It is the year 1911 and the House of Gold is a byword of opulence and order. From this Hampshire country seat, inspired by palaces of the Valois kings, Lord Goldbaum commands Europe’s most powerful banking dynasty.

The family has flourished spectacularly since great-grandfather Moses Goldbaum despatched five sons from the Frankfurt ghetto across the Continent.

Each young man left Jew Street with a silver sycamore seedpod, denoting the capacity to prosper on the hardest of ground.

Natasha Solomons’s lush new novel opens four generations on when the Goldbaums conduct business with princes, chancellors and kings. Her portrait of anglicised Jewish privilege is so believable that they seem to leap from a sepia-tinted photo album.