05/02/2026
Belle Burden’s blockbuster memoir “Strangers,” details the collapse of her marriage to a hedge-fund manager and has become a cautionary tale of financial naiveté. https://on.wsj.com/4tGwqRV
A Harvard-educated attorney and Vanderbilt heiress, Burden, 56, writes candidly about how she ceded control of her finances to her ex during their 20-year marriage, trusting him to act in her best interests.
She almost lost everything when her husband asked for a divorce at the dawn of the Covid-19 pandemic. As the exes hurtled toward trial, she discovered that he had accumulated a massive amount of wealth in his name only—money that would be protected by an amended prenuptial agreement she’d signed days before their wedding.
Money she brought into the marriage, meanwhile, could have gone to him: She used her family trusts to buy a New York apartment and a house on Martha’s Vineyard during the marriage and put her husband’s name on the deeds, marking them as joint property.
“It felt like an offering to him, to our marriage, to the family we were going to create,” she writes in the book. “And I thought that was what you did when you were married—share everything.”
In book groups and online, women are sharing their own stories of romantic betrayal, and the financial fallout that often follows, in response to the book, now in its ninth printing.
“I had hoped for this,” said Burden. “I’m really humbled by the way that women have grabbed onto it and seem to be making changes in their lives in response to it.”
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