In 1936, Margaret Wheeler, apparently an ordinary mother and housewife, found herself in the bizarre situation of suspecting that her child had been swapped with another at birth. The search for the truth led her finally, in 1944, to write to the one man she thought might help - a latter-day Solomon - Bernard Shaw. The correspondence which ensued reveals the irrepressible Margaret as a natural born writer, and woman of genius, as Shaw called her. Here, she challenges him, disagrees with, rebukes, intrigues, charms and even flirts with him. These letters have only recently been unearthed. The Afterword by Rebecca Swift and Margaret Wheeler's son reveals at last the truth about the swapped babies.