The Allure of Chanel explained

The Allure of Chanel
Author:Paul Morand
Title Orig:L'Allure de Chanel
Translator:Euan Cameron
Country:France
Language:French
Publisher:Éditions Hermann
Pub Date:1976
English Pub Date:2008
Pages:165
Isbn:9782705658380

The Allure of Chanel are the memoirs of the French fashion designer Coco Chanel, told to her friend Paul Morand. The book was written in the winter of 1946 and is based on a series of conversations held at a hotel in St. Moritz, Switzerland, where Chanel had invited Morand to write her memoirs. The conversations took place during the evenings and each night Morand stayed up to write notes. The notes were published in French in 1976 and in English in 2008, translated by Euan Cameron. A second English edition was published in 2012, expanded with original drawings by Karl Lagerfeld.[1]

Reception

Vicki Woods of The Spectator wrote in 2008 that the book "reads beautifully", and continued: "Paul Morand was her friend, not a predatory journalist: he let Chanel tell it as she wanted to, and what she wanted was to control her own legend: big up the dazzling bits ... and lose the misery-memoir bits (except those useful to 'my legend')."[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Eyre. Charlotte. 2015-02-09. Student illustration award from Pushkin Press. thebookseller.com. 2015-03-10.
  2. News: Woods. Vicki. 2008-12-12. The new look that never aged. The Spectator. 2015-03-10.