Tout Sweet: Hanging Up my High Heels for a New Life in France
3.5/5
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About this ebook
In her mid-thirties, fashion editor Karen has it all: a handsome boyfriend, a fab flat in west London and an array of gorgeous shoes. But when Eric leaves, she hangs up her Manolos and waves goodbye to her glamorous city lifestyle to go it alone in a run-down house in rural Poitou-Charentes, central western France.
Acquiring a host of new friends and unsuitable suitors, she learns that true happiness can be found in the simplest of things – a bike ride through the countryside on a summer evening, or a kir or three in a neighbour’s courtyard.
Perfect summer reading for anyone who dreams of chucking away their BlackBerry in favour of real blackberrying and downshifting to France.
Karen Wheeler
Karen Wheeler is a former fashion editor of the Mail on Sunday newspaper. During her career she has interviewed many of fashion's top names including Tom Ford, Karl Lagerfeld, Giorgio Armani and Calvin Klein and has written on a regular basis for many national newspapers and magazines including the Financial Times How To Spend It magazine, the Daily Mail and Sunday Times Style. She is a three times winner of the Jasmine literary award for writing about fragrance. She is still living happily in the Poitou-Charentes region of south western France, where fortunately most of her neighbours and the expats she has written about are still speaking to her. More information about the author can be found on her blog, www.toutsweet.net, which charts her everyday life in France and at www.karenwheeler.co.uk She also writes a regular column for Living France magazine.
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Reviews for Tout Sweet
29 ratings8 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I am enjoying travel memoirs more and more lately. I really enjoyed this one. I found the author wrote with a sensuality for life and for home that made me long to have something like that. She really made me want to move to a small cottage in France and just be.
I got sucked into this book early on and I found myself rooting for the characters, hoping she found that one guy who would treat her the way she deserved. One thing I didn't enjoy was the feeling that the book had no peek...just keep waiting for it and then it was over. Was an excellent book and will recommend it to my friends who enjoy this sort of thing. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Loved this book. Karen Wheeler makes her move to France seem much easier than it must have been. She does describe the challenges of fixing up an old house, but it is so interspersed with stories about the social life that it seems more romantic than back breaking difficult. She makes me want to move to France myself. I am looking forward to reading the sequels...
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Tout Sweet: Hanging Up My High Heels for a New Life in France is Karen Wheeler's memoir about giving up city life in London for the French countryside. For many years, Karen had a successful career as a fashion editor. At 35, she had a glamorous life and the perfect man - Eric. But, when talk between them turned to marriage, Eric bolted.
So, a heartbroken Karen decides to give up it all up and move to a small village in France. She buys a house in serious need of renovations. (No indoor bathroom! No kitchen floor!) Along with the house comes an assortment of very colorful neighbors to keep her busy.
Memoirs are not my usual genre of choice, but what drew me to this book was the fantasy of moving someplace new and starting over, and this lucky woman was able to do it. For most people (like me), it's only a dream, so it was fun to live vicariously through Karen. I enjoyed the rich descriptions of the life in her village and its quirky inhabitants.
As much as I liked the subject, I had a difficult time getting into the story. It didn't grab my attention and pick up the pace until half way through. There were some references to British places that were lost on me (Marks & Spencer? I had to google it!) and plenty of French words and phrases, but that didn't bother me too much.
Karen's move to France wasn't just about a change of scenery. It was also about letting go of Eric and moving on from the heartache. It took her a long time to deal with her emotional baggage. One quote from the book that stuck with me was by her friend Dave:
But you have to remember...that you can't run from unhappiness. You just take it with you.
I would recommend this book to fans of chick lit and fans of all things French. I give Tout Sweet 3 out of 5 stars. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5After my trip to France this past summer, there isn't much about this book and cover that doesn't appeal to me. There is that certain passion for life in all of its facets that one can readily recognize in the French, and something that is very romantic--on the surface. Don't get me wrong, it is very romantic, but Karen Wheeler's memoir reminds us that there are drafty, run-down homes to be fixed, bug bites to cure (with nary a 24-hour drugstore in sight), and a lack of eligible bachelors to be found. Nonetheless, grabbing at life when she could is an appealing ideal for many readers, including this reader. One of the things I loved about this memoir was the full disclosure of both Karen's self-possession and Karen's self-doubt. It was an interesting inside view of the person who took the journey. Maybe it was because of this unique inside look into her life that then had me fully vested in finding her true happiness, in whatever way possible. I loved watching her transform her rundown home into something all her own. From stripping floors to sealing and painting walls, it was so engaging to actually follow her process of remaking her little French home into one she could reside in. One thing that had me on edge for her were the discussions of her romantic relationships. We start the memoir with a gripping heartache that propels her to France, that I think we all hope will be resolved with great friendships--which I'm not sure the assortment of people she meets fit--or with a love interest--which is hard when they have other motivations. Throughout the book she discusses looking for "suitors" in anyone from her neighbor to the baker in town. There does seem to be this build up to a relationship or sorts, only to have it dropped in the course of about three sentences--literally. For me, the build up of friendships and suitors to a startling resolution left me a bit out of sorts. If we were to spend 200+ pages dropping mention of the importance of relationships, I would hope that we would have a balanced explanation of their place in her life by the end.Karen Wheeler is a marvelous writer, with an ability to recall her own life story in a novel-like fashion. I was so easily sucked in that my care and concern for her could match any fictional character I've been introduced to. Having said that, the philosophical end to the book felt very unsatisfying and left me sad for Karen, and not upbeat about the entire "finding of oneself" and slowing down that I think I was supposed to take away. On the whole, I have been recommending this memoir right and left, in the hopes that I can come to grips with my own reaction to its ending. It's not possible for me to spell out all the details, but I will say that the reality of it cuts through all that feels escapist or romantic. In short, I loved it and I hated it, both at the same time. I can't say that I've responded so strongly to a book in a very long time, and I'm still left trying to grasp how I felt. Honestly, you really have to read it to find out how Karen wrapped up her memoir. For this reader, I'll admit to wishing that maybe (like in my own life) there was just a bit more fiction to finish it off.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Tout Sweet is a memoir of author Karen Wheeler's spur of the moment idea to buy a house in the French countryside and then move there to renovate the house. I, of course, loved it. Especially since she moved to the same region of France that I used to live in, Poitou-Charentes, and she talks about some cities I know. Like, for instance, La Rochelle, where I lived. She had unhappy experiences in La Rochelle though, mainly because it reminded her of happy times spent there with her exboyfriend. Still, what's not to love?!This was a quick, easy read and if you love memoirs about people quitting their day jobs and moving to France, you will love it, like I did. I loved how honest Wheeler was about everything. She knows she has flaws, and she writes about them and how they affect her when she first moves to the tiny little village in France from London. For instance, what's a former fashion writer going to do with all of her insanely high and impractable designer shoes? Or her designer clothing? I was laughing when reading about the day she moved in to her new house (which needed a ton of work!), because she didn't even own the right kind of clothes for doing housework. It was interesting as well to see how her relationship developed with the other locals, French and British expats alike. It seems she ended up making a lot of really great and close friends who she probably still sees regularly. There was also some drama with a few of her friends while she was renovating the house. It was hilarious, but also kind of sad, since, ya know, the drama probably really did go down, since this is, ya know, a memoir. But hey, she's got some entertaining friends in that tiny little French village. I did get a bit annoyed at how much she referenced her exboyfriend throughout the book. She just could not seem to let him go. But honestly, this is a real person we're talking about who had real feelings for this guy who really broke her heart. And honestly, I would probably act the same way and think about my ex as much as she does, especially when she first moves to France. That's one of the things that I have to learn with memoirs. If I'm getting annoyed because the writer is talking a lot about a difficult time in her life, I need to remind myself more often that, hello Kelly, this really happened and it's a real person who has real feelings. I also kept waiting for a super happy ending where expat meets Prince Charming and lives happily ever after. But, as I stated up above, this is a memoir. So things don't always go smoothly and happily like in novels. And I love happy endings. Though while there may not be a Prince Charming waiting for Karen at the end of this book, there is a home. She does feel like she belongs with her new friends in her new village. And that's worth the read, and it's worth all the trouble she went through to renovate her house. This book made me so homesick for France, but it also made me reflect on the great times I had there, so I had a really happy, warm feeling inside while reading it. But what I didn't like? Karen needs to stop talking about eating her pain au chocolat from the local boulangerie every. single. morning. Because that's just too painful for a girl who used to do the same. exact. thing. *sigh*
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Former magazine editor, Karen Wheeler, decides in one day to buy a house in a small village in France to renovate. Her move to France from London takes several months, but eventually she arrives in France to begin her New Life. The easy pace of this memoir reads like fiction as Karen deals with workmen, matchmakers, and other eccentric small town characters.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I recently went on vacation out to the East Coast of Canada. I fell in love with the relaxed pace, the people and the scenery. I found myself looking around and thinking..." Hmm I could buy a little house and retire out here." Well Karen Wheeler took it a step farther. She bought a run down house in France on a whim and said good bye to England. Tout Sweet is the story of her journey to change and simplify her life. "To be honest, my life in London had started to seem very empty. I had wardrobes crammed with " It" bags and "must-have" shoes, most of them gifts from designers to thank me for articles I'd written, and I had cupboards full of free beauty products. I had spent most of my life so far focused on work and chasing material possessions. Now I had them in abundance and yet, at thirty-five, I was unhappy. There had to be more to life, I'd decided, than a stockpile of sought-after accessories."Tout Sweet follows the progress of the house renovation, life in a small village and details the people she meets. I really enjoyed the descriptions of the house renovations and the village itself.Unfortunately a lot of the book reads more like a social diary and the prose themselves are somewhat stilted. Some of the 'natives' are wonderful, some are a bit odd, but I think I found the ex-pats the most worrisome. Karen's friend Dave and his son sounded downright dangerous to me. Dave's son leaves an ax on Karen's pillow - something she finds odd but fluffs off. They later have a falling out but she regrets not having Dave's friendship later on. Count yourself lucky I say.Karen's flight to France was also prompted by a broken heart. Of course I understand the desire to find a partner, but at times Wheeler's search smacks of desperation. She seems to have a knack for picking the wrong bloke."He has a girlfriend but he wants to be friends with me. And I can't help thinking that my life is going to be so much better with him in it."Although at the end of the year, Karen is happy with herself and her choices."And as I have rebuilt the house, I have also rebuilt my life. I have learned that I can move to a place where I know no one and create a new life for myself. It is very empowering to know that."I applaud Karen for chasing her dream. It does take a lot of gumption to pick up stakes and start over.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The writer of this book was witty, smart, and very very funny. She pokes at the idealistic view we get from writers like Peter Mayle, talking a great deal about the fact that her part of the France seems to be absent any sort of culinary greatness. Regardless, I delighted in reading about her eventual settling into the French village - making friends while navigating the refurbishment of her little home.This book would be perfect with a good glass of wine (I went with red!) in the garden during a late summer afternoon. I don't have a garden, so I had to improvise - I have to admit that Ms. Wheeler's description of her lovely French garden had me yearning to buy a house though! I unconditionally recommend this book, and I hope you will delight in it as I have.