From this century, in France, three names will remain: de Gaulle, Picasso, and Chanel. Andr Malraux
Coco Chanel created the look of the modern woman and was the high priestess of couture.
She believed in simplicity, and elegance, and freed women from the tyranny of fashion. She inspired women to take off their bone corsets and cut their hair. She used ordinary jersey as couture fabric, elevated the waistline, and created bell-bottom trousers, trench coats, and turtleneck sweaters.
In the 1920s, when Chanel employed more than two thousand people in her workrooms, she had amassed a personal fortune of $15 million and went on to create an empire.
Jean Cocteau once said of Chanel that she had the head of a little black swan. And, added Colette, the heart of a little black bull.
At the start of World War II, Chanel closed down her couture house and went across the street to live at the Htel Ritz. Picasso, her friend, called her one of the most sensible women in Europe. She remained at the Ritz for the duration of the war, and after, went on to Switzerland.
For more than half a century, Chanels life from 1941 to 1954 has been shrouded in vagueness and rumor, mystery and myth. Neither Chanel nor her many biographers have ever told the full story of these years.
Now Hal Vaughan, in this explosive narrativepart suspense thriller, part wartime portraitfully pieces together the hidden years of Gabrielle Coco Chanels life, from the Nazi occupation of Paris to the aftermath of World War II.
Vaughan reveals the truth of Chanels long-whispered collaboration with Hitlers high-ranking officials in occupied Paris from 1940 to 1944. He writes in detail of her decades-long affair with Baron Hans Gnther von Dincklage, Spatz (sparrow in English), described in most Chanel biographies as being an innocuous, English-speaking tennis player, playboy, and harmless dupea loyal German soldier and diplomat serving his mother country and not a member of the Nazi party.
In Vaughans absorbing, meticulously researched book, Dincklage is revealed to have been a Nazi master spy and German military intelligence agent who ran a spy ring in the Mediterranean and in Paris and reported directly to Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels, right hand to Hitler.
The book pieces together how Coco Chanel became a German intelligence operative; how and why she was enlisted in a number of spy missions; how she escaped arrest in France after the war, despite her activities being known to the Gaullist intelligence network; how she fled to Switzerland for a nine-year exile with her lover Dincklage. And how, despite the French courts opening a case concerning Chanels espionage activities during the war, she was able to return to Paris at age seventy and triumphantly resurrect and reinvent herselfand rebuild what has become the iconic House of Chanel.
Sleeping with the Enemy: Coco Chanel's Secret War
Knopf
$26.31 - $300.00
- UPC:
- 9780307592637
- Maximum Purchase:
- 3 units
- Binding:
- Hardcover
- Publication Date:
- 2011-08-16
- Release Date:
- 2011-08-16
- Author:
- Hal Vaughan
- Language:
- english
- Edition:
- 1st