Virginielle said:Absolutely. Read Entre Nous first, then Fatale. I also own Frederic Fekkai's A Year of Style, which is terrific. He's from Aix-en-Provence and gives some really interesting tips---on pretty much everything. The book is divided into 12 chapters (one for each month), each with an individual theme to do with style. He references Provence quite a bit and you get the feeling that he's got a really good feel for French style and that you can learn something from him. I've had the book for over two years, and I still read each chapter at the beginning of every month. It's as close to a step-by-step guide to French style as you're ever going to get. While the other books are informative on the topic, this is more instructional. Even if you're not fascinated by French style, this book has advice you can use. God, I sound like a advertisement. Anyway, as well as great style tips, I've gotten a few of my favorite recipes from A Year of Style.
SNAP!!!! I have them books too and they are quite good. Entre Nous i found ok, but a bit dated. The Fekkai book, as you said has some great tips (the hot choc is the best) Have u read Two Lipstics and a Lover by Helena Frith Powell? Thats like an investigation into French Women


I'd love their elegance and class
and I am happy with myself and my looks
however with that amount of great shops in Paris + secret addresses where you can get designers things for a fraction of the price it is not such a problem. If you are living a city, where you have mostly H&M (un petit ami suedois
as parisian gals call it ) it is a problem to wear something really stylish
Some of us aren't fortunate enough to be blessed with perfect hair, so we work with what we got. For a lot of people, that means using a flat iron. My hair is practically a war zone if I don't try to control it with a flat iron; if I didn't use one, it would come to life.
Girls were ALWAYS paying attention to what they were wearing - in Poland where I come from and in Paris where I came for a year to study.