Chanel and Her World: Friends, Fashion, and Fame

by Edmonde Charles-Roux

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Coco Chanel was a legend who revolutionised the way women looked. She became the single most important arbiter of fashion and taste in the 20th century. Just her name was sufficient to convey prestige, quality and unmistakable style. The Duke of Westminster wooed her, Stravinsky played for her and Goldwyn enticed her to Hollywood. She knew everybody who was anybody in the world of the arts from Picasso and Cocteau to Marlene Dietrich and Ingrid Bergman. She designed frankly fake jewellery, show more introduced the basic 'little black dress' and perfumed the world with her No. 5. However, as this remarkable biography shows, there was a mass of contradictions behind the myth of 'Mademoiselle'. Chanel follows her story from her upbringing in provincial Auvergne through her first successes in the 1920s to her comeback in the 1950s and 1960s. Edmond Charles-Roux's book is definitive as history and immensely entertaining as gossip. show less

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4 reviews
I don't believe I have ever been quite so disillusioned after reading a book. As an aspiring designer, Chanel is my hero because of what she did for fashion and for women in general. She is the reason women look like they do today and, at least in my opinion, can be credited for liberating women in a sense. It was technically Poiret who freed women from the corset, but Chanel freed women from the choking frivolity imposed on feminine fashion by men, not once but twice in her long life. Every time anyone wears a little black dress, buys their thousandth piece of costume jewelry, or pulls an article of jersey, they should be thanking Coco.

If only she had been as admirable a person as she was a designer. Charles-Roux's biography portrays show more Chanel as an insecure peasant who labored all her life to keep everyone from finding out about her humble origins. Furthermore, her life unfolds as merely a series of disappointing romances in which Coco, the fearless courtier, depends completely on her lovers. Indeed, the Chanel empire was financed by a rich boyfriend. The worst of it are Chanel's Nazi connections during the Occupation. Coco not only had an affair with an SS agent but was involved in a Nazi-backed mission in which she was meant to convince Churchill to offer Germany a peace that didn’t involve unconditional surrender. This episode is thrilling but completely changed what I thought about Chanel. Her life was exciting but in the end rather sad and not in any way heroic, as I had hoped it would be.

As biographies go, this one isn't the best. The translation is either very bad or Charles-Roux is just not that good of a writer. Also, I had hoped she would have spent a lot more time discussing how Chanel built her empire and why she developed the clothing and unique style that she did. Charles-Roux only gives the reader Chanel's personal life when I was looking for at least as much information on her professional life. On the other hand, Charles-Roux ties Chanel's life together nicely, pointing out themes that popped up from time to time in Coco's work and personal relationships. If you can get past the writing, it is a pretty good read. Skip it if you have only a passing interest in fashion or perhaps if you are too interested in fashion and in Chanel's work; it's difficult to go on regarding her as a hero after reading it.
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Biography of Gabrielle "Coco" Chanel,a fashion icon unlike any other by Edmonde Charles-Roux, her official biographer and close friend.
Haven't read it yet! It's beautiful to flip through, tho.
Das Leben der berühmten Modefachfrau.
Ihre Zeit im zweiten Weltkrieg

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23+ Works 604 Members
Edmonde Charles-Roux was born in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France on April 17, 1920. Soon after the fall of France in World War II, she received a nursing diploma and volunteered to serve in an ambulance corps of the French Foreign Legion. At Verdun, she was wounded during an aerial bombardment of the field hospital where she was working but stayed at show more her post. After serving with the Resistance in Provence, she was wounded again when the First French Army advanced into Austria. She was awarded the Croix de Guerre and the Legion of Honor. In 1946, she worked as a writer for Elle. Two years later, she began writing for the French edition of Vogue. She was the editor in chief there from 1954 to 1966. Her first novel, To Forget Palermo, was published in 1966 and won the Prix Goncourt, France's biggest literary prize. Her other works include Chanel: Her Life, Her World - and the Woman Behind the Legend She Herself Created; Chanel and Her World; She, Adrienne; and a two-volume biography of the Swiss explorer and writer Isabelle Eberhardt. She died on January 20, 2016 at the age of 95. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Amphoux, Nancy (Translator)

Series

Belongs to Publisher Series

Harvill (37)

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Chanel and Her World: Friends, Fashion, and Fame
Original publication date
2005-03-09
People/Characters
Coco Chanel
Important places
Deauville, Calvados, Normandy, France; Paris, Île-de-France, France; Hôtel Ritz, Paris, Île-de-France, France
Related movies
Coco Before Chanel (2009 | IMDb)

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, Art & Design, Biography & Memoir, General Nonfiction, Home & Garden, History
DDC/MDS
746.9Arts & recreationDrawing & decorative artsFashion Design / Weaving, Knitting, EmbroideryOther textile products
LCC
TT505 .C45 .C4713TechnologyHandicrafts. Arts and craftsHandicrafts. Arts and craftsClothing manufacture. Dressmaking. Tailoring
BISAC

Statistics

Members
246
Popularity
131,620
Reviews
4
Rating
(4.24)
Languages
English, French, German
Media
Paper
ISBNs
16
ASINs
1