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Book Review: ‘Chanel: An Intimate Life’ by Lisa Chaney

By the end of this biography I didn't know whether to love or hate Gabrielle Chanel.
Chanel: An Intimate Life

Chanel: An Intimate Life by Lisa Chaney, Fig Tree, $39.95

By the end of this biography I didn’t know whether to love or hate Gabrielle Chanel. The designer helped liberate women from being purely decorative, giving them freedom to move for work and play, and became one of the world’s first female business moguls.

But she also lived with a Nazi spy during the occupation of Paris, forcing her to flee France after the war and resettle in Switzerland.

Lisa Chaney is not the kind of writer who digs for dirt, but Chanel’s life offers up a wealth of scandal, including lesbian affairs and a drug addiction.

The mistress of a playboy during her youth, Chanel went on to become muse or mistress to the 20th century’s greatest artists, and yearned for a child with the Duke of Devonshire, one of the world’s richest men.

Despite her many loves she was fiercely independent until the day she died. Chaney gives new insights into the life of the first truly modern woman.

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Book Review: ‘Girl In A Green Gown’ by Carola Hicks

This book is refreshingly entertaining and educational, taking us into the rich symbolism of the painting.
Girl In A Green Gown: The History and Mystery of the Arnolfini Portrait

Girl In A Green Gown: The History and Mystery of the Arnolfini Portrait by Carola Hicks, Random House, $39.95

It’s been an eventful 600 years for this masterpiece of western art. Painted in 1434 by Jan van Eyck, this glorious portrait of a wealthy Bruges merchant (with an unfortunate resemblance to Vladimir Putin) and his richly gowned wife has inspired artists throughout history; from the Renaissance all the way through to the more recent reinterpretation of the pair as Muppet and Star Wars figures.

Very little is known about Mr and Mrs Arnolfini but everything in the painting speaks to us of their wealth, and Hicks amusingly compares the portrait to a shoot for Hello magazine.

This book is refreshingly entertaining and educational, taking us into the rich symbolism of the painting, and travelling with it from aspirational medieval Bruges to the courts of Europe, its plunder in the Napoleonic wars and its extraordinary popularity today in Britain’s National Gallery.

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Book Review: ‘The Litigators’ by John Grisham

Never challenging but never predictable, The Litigators is a great read, you'll be cheering David Zinc through the mess in which he finds himself.
The Litigators

The Litigators by John Grisham, Hodder & Stoughton, $39.99

After several soul-destroying years in the corporate sweatshop of a massive legal firm, young lawyer David Zinc finally burns out.

He takes his wobbly legs and palpitating heart to a nearby bar and forgets his problems the old fashioned way.

Somehow he ends up in the ambulance chasing “boutique” firm of Finley & Figg, attorneys who struggle to stay on the right side of the law themselves. Should David have stayed in the metaphorical frying pan after all?

John Grisham brings a pleasant whimsy to his legal knowledge in The Litigators.

He pitches poor likeable David, who’s never been in a courtroom before, up against a legal goliath, with no one but melancholy Oscar Finley and incorrigible Wally Figg to help him.

Never challenging but never predictable, The Litigators is a great read, you’ll be cheering David Zinc through the mess in which he finds himself.

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Book Review: ‘A More Perfect Heaven’ by Dava Sobel

Dava Sobel gives us the man who revolutionised our understanding of how the universe worked, Polish cleric, doctor and astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus.
A More Perfect Heaven

A More Perfect Heaven by Dava Sobel, Bloomsbury, $35

She re-invented the non-fiction form with Longitude, her 1995 account of clockmaker John Harrison’s invention of the marine chronometer; here, Dava Sobel gives us the man who revolutionised our understanding of how the universe worked, Polish cleric, doctor and astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus.

His shocking — and in the 15th century, ludicrous — idea was that the Earth revolved around the sun, not the other way round.

Fear of ridicule stopped him publishing his theory for another 30 years and this book, told in the form of a play sandwiched between two more conventional histories, tells the life and imagines the thoughts of Copernicus as he climbed the ladder of the Catholic Church hierarchy during turbulent times.

They knew, citing Psalm 104, that “the Lord God laid the foundation of the Earth, that it not be moved forever. Forever”. They were wrong.

It meant the end of the beautiful theory of fixed celestial spheres but the beginning of true cosmology, and makes for a fascinating read.

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Book Review: ‘The Secret in their Eyes’ by Eduardo Sacheri

"The book behind the Oscar-winning best foreign film", says the stamp on the cover.
The Secret in their Eyes

The Secret in their Eyes, by Eduardo Sacheri, HarperCollins, $29.95

“The book behind the Oscar-winning best foreign film”, says the stamp on the cover. Well, in front of the film actually, but that gold statue clearly woke up the publishers and six years on this terrific crime thriller-cum-love story appears in English for the first time.

On the surface, it’s about a former investigator in the courts of Buenos Aries, haunted by a long-ago case of a beautiful young woman’s rape and murder.

He risked his career — and life — to find the killer and is now writing a book telling the true story.

This all happened in Argentina, during the 1970s, when the courts operated by whim of the military junta.

The political machinations, and the attempts to block the investigation, provide a rich background to the novel’s broader themes of justice and revenge, plus our detective hero’s attempts to rekindle an unrequited love. It’s a great mixture, the writing strong and simple; I found it gripping.

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Book Review: ‘Night Circus’ by Erin Morgenstern

A fantastical tale set in the late 1800s about two old magicians engaged in an eternal duel.
Night Circus

Night Circus, by Erin Morgenstern, Harvill Secker, $32.95

A fantastical tale set in the late 1800s about two old magicians engaged in an eternal duel.

Their weapons in this lifetime are a young pair, Celia and Marco, both gifted with extraordinary powers; their arena of battle is a marvellous black and white circus which appears mysteriously as night falls and disappears at dawn.

It is full of wonders and audiences delight to the garden made entirely of ice, the curtain of stars, the eternal white bonfire — the twist being that these are not tricks but real magic, created for the sole purpose of the duel.

Which is, we learn, a deadly game. Only one of the contestants will survive — until Celia and Marco fall in love, putting the whole sinister plan at risk.

This debut novel is a publishing sensation, hyped as the next step for Harry Potter fans, though you needn’t be a fantasy reader to enjoy it. Just roll up, suspend disbelief and let yourself be enchanted.

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Book Review: ‘Blue Nights’ by Joan Didion

Only the great Joan Didion, perhaps, could ask this of us. To return to the well of despair and drink deeply, again, of her pain.
Blue Nights

Blue Nights, by Joan Didion, 4th Estate, $27.99

Only the great Joan Didion, perhaps, could ask this of us. To return to the well of despair and drink deeply, again, of her pain.

Her last book, The Year of Magical Thinking, was a searing response to the loss of her husband, writer John Gregory Dunne, after a heart attack at their dining table.

Blue Nights concerns the death of their adopted daughter, Quinana Roo, less than two years later.

It was a disease, there was surely nothing she could have done to save her daughter, but in that clear, cool, distinctive Didion voice she re-examines her lapses and failures as a mother (“only later did I see I had been raising her as a doll”) and celebrates the wonder of her girl and remembers the blue nights, the shining summer twilights when the family was together and time seemed to stretch forever, before the chill came.

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Royals before they were famous

She was just 26 years old, mourning the death of her father and about to be crowned Queen of England, but in this previously unseen portrait, Elizabeth II exudes calm and dignity.

The image is one of 35 official photos taken in March 1952 by Kenneth Clayton. Clayton was allowed to keep the snaps as long as he kept them private for 30 years.

He kept his promise until his death in 2001 and now his family has put the images up for auction to celebrate Queen Elizabeth’s diamond jubilee.

Here are some candid pictures of some of our favourite royals before they became famous.

Elizabeth in 1952 and in 2007.

The image was taken before Elizabeth’s coronation but after her father’s death.

Kate Middleton in 2005, and in London yesterday.

Princess Diana aged just 19 in 1980 and looking stunning in 1995.

Denmark’s Crown Princess Mary in 2003 and last month.

Sarah Ferguson before her wedding in 1986 and in 2011.

Camilla, The Duchess of Cornwall, in 1998 and earlier this month.

Grace Kelly as a movie star in 1950 and a princess in 1979.

Prince Edward’s wife Sophie in 1995 and earlier this month.

Prince Harry’s on/off love Chelsy Davy in 2006 and at the royal wedding in April, 2011.

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Elle’s first bikini shoot in six years

For the first time in six years, Australian supermodel Elle Macpherson is back in her signature triangle bikini.

In a shoot for US magazine People the 47-year-old mother of two, who has had a long career known as “The Body”, showed she still has it.

Putting her figure down to her healthy lifestyle (get tips from Elle’s trainer here) and her good genes, she admits she still gets nervous at shoots.

“I do get jitters,” she told People. “I was comfortable [at the shoot]. But I had to get my self-conscious ‘maybe I don’t look my best’ head out of the way and go with, ‘Let’s celebrate where I’m at’.”

Flick through the pictures of Elle in bikinis throughout her career, then watch the video from her shoot with People.

Elle Macpherson for *People* magazine.

Elle Macpherson for People magazine.

Elle with fellow models Kathy Ireland and Rachel Hunter on the cover of *Sports Illustrated*.

Elle with fellow models Kathy Ireland and Rachel Hunter on the cover of Sports Illustrated.

Elle models a sailor suit bikini in 1994.

Elle soaks up the sun in Ibiza.

Elle shoots an exercise video on the beach in Hawaii.

Elle on the beach in her signature straw hat.

Elle hits the pool with her son.

Elle on Sydney Harbor after a day of sailing.

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Camilla steps out in Princess Diana’s jewellery

They were bitter love rivals for two decades so it’s not hard to imagine how Princess Diana would feel about Camilla wearing her favourite jewels.

The Duchess of Cornwall wore Diana’s beloved diamond and emerald brooch to the races in Cheltenham yesterday.

The Queen Mother gave Diana the brooch when she married Prince Charles in 1981 and it was returned to the royal family after her death in 1997. Charles then gave it to his new wife Camilla.

Diana would no doubt be more pleased to see Kate Middleton wearing her treasures.

Diana wearing the brooch as a necklace in 1986, and Camilla yesterday.

Kate has modified Diana’s earrings and wears them frequently.

Prince William gave Kate his mother’s engagement ring in November 2010.

Kate borrowed this diamond brooch from Queen Elizabeth for her trip to Canada.

The tiara Kate wore to her wedding has been worn by the Queen Mother and Princess Anne.

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