"Nature gives you the face you have at twenty. Life shapes the face you have at thirty. But at fifty you get the face you deserve." Coco Chanel
Thanks, Coco, I'll remember those words as I creep ever closer to the latter .... 🙄
I admit going into this one, other than the brand, I knew little about Coco Chanel - oh, and that it was the title of a Nicki Minaj song (although now I find out it is really a reference to cocaine, not Coco Chanel - oops!) The book cover caught my eye though, with a blurb that said, "If you only read one book this year, make it 'The Chanel Sisters.'" Super catchy and intriguing, so I bit, and I'm glad I did!
The story covers the lives of the three Chanel sisters, and is told from the POV of youngest sister, Antionette. Antoinette and Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel know they’re destined for "something better," which is the overwhelming theme of the book. The Chanel sisters, who were abandoned by their parents at a young age, were raised at a convent orphanage with nuns constantly telling them that they were destined to be the wives of ordinary tradesmen, at best. At night, the sisters' secret stash of romance novels and magazine cutouts hidden underneath the floorboards, keep their dreams of the future alive. When they are finally of age, the sisters set out with a fierce determination to prove themselves to a society that has never accepted them. Their journey propels them out of poverty and into the glitzy cafés and dazzling performance halls of Paris, where a hat boutique starts out as a hobby and grows to a business beyond what either sister ever dreamed. Their journey is also fraught with incredible heartbreak, death, sadness, and personal triumph.
I thought the book started out a bit slow with the orphanage chapters, but it did not stay that way for long, as the last half of the book was unputdownable! I know that the main focus was on Coco, and while I enjoyed her character, I absolutely adored Antionette, and found her journey much more intriguing and relatable. My favorite part of the story was the complex relationship between Antoinette and Lucho, the married Argentinian Polo player, and her "something better." Their story was so powerful and so full of yearning - it was literally palpable, and completely melted my often-critical-of-romance-storylines heart.
In general, the relationships between the characters really shape the book: The sibling relationship between Gabrielle and Antoinette, and their older sister, Julia Berthe; the family relationship between the sisters and their young aunt, Etienne; the love stories of Gabrielle and Boy and Antoinette and Lucho. Each of these relationships were complex and ahead of their time and were what ultimately made the book memorable.
The only thing that somewhat confused me was the hat boutique. I thought Coco Chanel's claim to fame was Chanel No. 5, but that is a very minor part of the book - barely a reference, in fact. The book is heavy on the sisters' hat creations and eventually Coco's clothing line, but little to nothing about perfume. I kept waiting for how the perfume line was born, but it never really happened. It doesn't take anything away from the story - I just found it interesting.
For me, the mark of a great historical fiction book is one that makes me want to learn more about the characters, and this book does just that! A must-read for all of my historical fiction-loving friends on here! 4 stars.