
Weddings
Danielle Steel's new novel follows a chic Parisian-born wedding dress designer whose daughter's engagement cracks open three generations of women's unresolved questions about love, safety, and whether marriage is worth the risk. It's a book club natural, built for readers who want their family drama laced with real emotional stakes.
From the review
Dominique Dupont spends her days fitting other women for the moment they'll be looked at hardest, and Steel is canny to make her a dress designer rather than a planner or a caterer. There's a real difference between staging an event and building the thing a woman has to stand still inside while everyone stares. Dominique reads fabric and boning and hidden seams the way other people read faces, and that expertise becomes the book's actual subject, even when the sentences themselves stay plain and unfussy. You start to notice how often a scene turns on what someone is wearing, or refusing to wear, and how much that tells you about what she's willing to become.
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