A culinary goddess who raises her well-behaved children and looks stunningly thin and chic- there's a unique image of French women in the bookstores in the United States
A culinary goddess who raises her well-behaved children and looks stunningly thin and chic- there's a unique image of French women in the bookstores in the United States. "French Women Don't Get Facelifts" is the latest addition to an ever-growing list of self-help books that lay bare the secrets of the sophisticated French mademoiselle to her awkward American sister.
For American women, "France has always been a country of chic, fashion, seduction, savoir-faire and charm," said the author, Mireille Guiliano, whose previous book "French Women Don't Get Fat" was a best-seller in 2004.
"I don't want to give the impression of saying that we're better or superior," added Guiliano, 67, a former chief executive of Veuve Clicquot champagne who is married to an American and lives in New York, Paris and the south of France.
"It's not a matter of who's right or wrong," she told AFP. "I just try to say that there are other options. I make suggestions. The American woman is curious to know how to make something better or different."
Guiliano is something of a pioneer in the genre of self-help books with a French accent, having built on the success of "French Women Don't Get Fat" with cookbooks and lifestyle guides for Americans forever wrestling with their work-life balance.
From other writers, the past year has seen such titles as "French Twist Cupcakes: 32 Recipes for that Ooh La La Experience" by Lyon-based baker Lucinda Segneri, "How to be Chic and Elegant: Tips from a French Woman" by Marie-Anne Lecoeur, and "Forever Chic: Frenchwomen's Secrets for Timeless Beauty, Style and Substance" by Tish Jett.
Advertisement
"We aren't envious, but curious," said Jennifer Scott, whose 2012 book "Lessons from Madame Chic: 20 Stylish Secrets I Learned While Living in Paris" was inspired by her stint as an exchange student in the French capital.
Advertisement
Jean Beaman, a sociologist at Duke University, said it's true that many American women perceive their French counterparts to be "fashionable and stylish (and) beautiful in an sort of effortless way."
By way of example, she cited photographs of former French first lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, who was born in Italy but grew up in France from the age of seven.
But Beaman, who studies immigrants who settle in France, added: "As an American, it's sometimes a little bit frustrating that these books sort of paint a very idealized version of France to Americans, and don't necessarily reflect the multi-ethnic diversity that exists in France."
Indeed, the kind of French woman who informs these self-help books is typically Parisian and living in the capital's better neighborhoods.
"Of course, there are French women who are fat and who undergo cosmetic surgery," said Guiliano, "but not to the scale that's seen among American women -- far from it."
Guiliano is known as "the high priestess of French lady wisdom" and her latest book -- which comes as American baby boomers settle into middle age -- is subtitled "The secret of aging with style and attitude."
She's horrified by the notion of Botox ("I say 'non' to the needle") and proposes in its place robust skin moisturizing, daily exercise and an "anti-aging food prescription" that includes beet mille-feuille, tartare of cucumber and tomatoes, and chocolate souffles with piment d'Esplette.
Most of all, she tells American women, just shift your attitude, stop living in extremes, and start accepting yourself for who you are.
"My advice is first of all to look for simplicity," she said. "The older you get, the more you appreciate that less is better."
In the days after its release, "French Women Don't Get Facelifts" was rather well received. Less impressed was the Allure Beauty Expert blog, which pointed out that "landmark research" underpinning today's facelifting techniques took place in the 1970s -- in France.
Source-AFP