THE
DRESS THIEF
BY
NATALIE MEG EVANS
THE
BLURB:-
A modern tale of desire
and deception set in the world of 1930s Parisian haute couture.
Alix Gower has a dream:
to join the ranks of Coco Chanel and become a designer in the
high-stakes world of French fashion.
But Alix also has a
secret; she supports her family by stealing designs for the foreign
market. A hidden sketchbook, and a moment inside Hermรจs,
is all she needs to create a perfect replica, to be whisked off to
production in New York.
Then Alix is given her
big break- a chance to work in one of the most prominent Parisian
fashion houses- but at the price of copying the breakthrough Spring
Collection.
And when a mystery from
her past resurfaces in connection to a handsome war reporter, Alix
learns that the slightest misstep- or misplaced trust- could be all
it seems for her life to begin falling apart at the seams.
THE
REALITY:-
I had seen this book on
Amazon and had earmarked it for buying, so was overjoyed to find it
staring up at me in a charity shop!
As a fashion designer,
what's not to like about intrigue and glamour in the world of
Parisian haute couture in the 1930s? I've been to Paris and it sure
lives up to its stereotype, which is not a bad thing at all. I've
walked the length and breadth of its streets in a day (Paris is small
enough to do just that- mind you, I had no choice due to there being no trains running due to industrial action. I missed a Rene Magritte exhibition and a
visit to the Catacombs due to nothing being open that day and it
really pissed me off. Whenever I go to France, it seems that someone
is striking somewhere).
This book stunk like an
ashtray. Whoever had this before me smoked forty fags a day. As an
ex-smoker, you realise that you don't appreciate how much cigarettes
stink until you give up and can smell a fag being lit five floors
down.
This book was written
in a bouncy style that led a merry old dance through Paris, back to
Alsace- the county of origin of Mathilda and Jean-Yves- and also
through Verrian's life. I loved the way the couture House of Javier
was described: from its workings to its workrooms, with its petty
jealousies, bullying and favouritism. Nothing has changed in the
fashion industry, then!
I warmed to the
heroine, Alix, immediately and sympathised with her position- a
talented young lady with the natural skills and charm to “make it”
but in the unfortunate and familiar position of simply needing to
make ends meet. I liked the mix of good and bad throughout the
characters and also the mystery of Alix's attacker, which came as a
REAL surprise.
The author also adds
her own notes at the end of the book, including those regarding
fashion in the 1930s and female couturiers. She also includes her
recipe for French onion soup- I must try it to see if it tastes
better than mine!
A gem of a book- fun
and charming.
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