Thursday, May 24, 2007

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Lauren Weisberger - THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA

funny and cool, but ... an epic surface greatly performed!

Obviously I saw the movie. It amused me, what is needed. Like Meryl Streep, so I can forgive him anything. And now, a few months later, here it gives me the book. Good. How to respond to these six hundred page views on the big screen? And there I was like a reflex that I could describe as "Bridget Jonessien. I read this newspaper whose crusty humor carried me to tears of laughter, where the film which had resulted in me deeply disappointed. So here I am about to do the opposite with "The Devil Wears Prada."

And what a surprise! Again the adaptation was very rough and finally far enough pages of the novel. Much funnier, much more complex and more accurate as well. Less Machiavellian bottom. But there Andrea discovers more spiritual, much more Tortured by his own side to quit all the horror he felt the world of fashion. Lauren Weisberger, author, invites us to a methodical and subtle exploration of the cruelty installed by the praying mantis Prestly Miranda. This is not a giant icicle balance alternately cruel arms stitched to spread best-of programs such as New Star. She is a woman from nothing and reached the summit. This is not a manipulative sadist but only a temperamental woman who nobody ever dared to say "crap".

This novel remains an extremely pleasant accessory to accompany a beach towel and a tube of sunscreen. Many self-mockery in the description of an illusory perfection that person will never reach.

For those who had hitherto escaped the pitch:
Prestly Miranda is the editor of Runway, the fashion magazine that makes the rain and fine weather in this area throughout the world. It is a terrible tyrant before whom vixen everyone is petrified of scary. Andrea Sachs, fresh out of college, finds himself recruited by chance by the magazine and becomes the personal assistant to Miranda. This book recounts his ordeal at It starts at one year.

The parallel must be drawn: the author was the personal assistant to Anna Wintour, patroness of Vogue magazine in New York, said to be the high priestess of the fashion world and the most tyrannical employer that it is (but in the real world).

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