Thursday, July 16, 2026

Paris in July: In the Paris Fashion by Sophie Beaumont

 




When vintage fashion afficionado and dealer, Isabelle finds a letter in a random tin, she is convinced that it maybe an authentic letter from legendary Elisabeth Fontaine. Now she just has to follow her hunch and prove it.

Fontaine was a shooting star in French fashion in the late 1920s, both for her work and for the fact that she died tragically young. After a hugely successful first season, Fontaine was supposedly working on a dress design for her second season that was going to take the world by storm. However, she and her tennis star husband died in a car crash. Rumours have swirled for decades about the dress but no one has ever been able to find the designs. 

The letter seems to suggest that the designs can be found in an orphan box, whatever that might be. Determined to find out more, she visits the address on the envelope where she meets Romy Valence. Romy is a fashion design student who left behind the career that her family approved of to study the one she dreamed of. Thank goodness her Uncle Alex has supported her dreams because her family certainly has not. She is struggling to know if she made the right choice or not, or if she should give up her dream once and for all. 

The final person who makes up our core trio of characters is Australian fashion writer Audrey Oliver. Audrey's grandmother worked in Paris during Fontaine's time. Now, Audrey is writing a book and is researching based on her grandmother's journal. This isn't Audrey's first time in Paris. She has been many times, but the most formative time was when she first visited the city and fell in love with a young man who broke her heart, which has had a lasting impact on her subsequent relationships.

As the three women are drawn together on their quest to find out more about the life and work of Elisabeth Fontaine, their friendship grows. Each of them brings a different set of skills to the table, harmonising well together but also showing each of them off to individual advantage. 

There is quite a bit of drama in this story, and it moved along at a cracking pace. There are new relationships, old loves, a bit of intrigue and many lovely descriptions of Paris and it's fashion areas which are somewhat off the regular tourist track.

I have many childhood memories of being dragged, under protest, to cheap material shops. Beaumont almost convinced me that I should allow myself the luxury of visiting a material shop in the Montmartre area of Paris and feel the various silks and other luxury materials. I should also add visiting button stores like Dam Buttons to my itinerary the next time I make it to Paris, whenever that might be.

I already knew that I liked Beaumont's books. I enjoyed both of her previous books which I have posted about in previous Paris in July events.  With this read, it felt like the right book at the right time for me as I read it in a day, and I closed it with a very contented sigh. Does the book have some flaws? Absolutely. Will everyone love it like I did? Probably not. Did it leave me smiling long after I finished the book? Yes. And that's what makes it a 5 star read for me.

Beaumont has now explored Paris through it's food, gardens and fashion. I wonder what is next. Whatever it is, I am there for it!

I am sharing this review with Paris in July, hosted by Emma and with Bookish Books hosted at Bloggin' Bout Books.

Rating 5/5




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