Friday 12 October 2018

Book Club Book Review: Dressing the Dearloves by Kelly Doust


Title: Dressing the Dearloves
Author: Kelly Doust
Publisher: Harper Collins 
Publication Date: 20th August 2018
RRP: $32.99
Pages: 416
Format Read: paperback
Source: Publisher via Beauty & Lace book club

One crumbling grand manor house, a family in decline, five generations of women, and an attic full of beautiful clothes with secrets and lies hidden in their folds. Kelly Doust, author of Precious Things, spins another warm, glamorous and romantic mystery of secrets, love, fashion, families - and how we have to trust in ourselves, even in our darkest of days. One for lovers of Kate Morton, Belinda Alexandra, Fiona McIntosh and Lucy Foley.


Failed fashion designer Sylvie Dearlove is coming home to England - broke, ashamed and in disgrace - only to be told her parents are finally selling their once-grand, now crumbling country house, Bledesford, the ancestral home of the Dearlove family for countless generations.

Sylvie has spent her whole life trying to escape being a Dearlove, and the pressure of belonging to a family of such headstrong, charismatic and successful women. Beset by self-doubt, she starts helping her parents prepare Bledesford for sale, when she finds in a forgotten attic a thrilling cache of old steamer trunks and tea chests full of elaborate dresses and accessories acquired from across the globe by five generations of fashionable Dearlove women. Sifting through the past, she also stumbles across a secret which has been hidden - in plain sight - for decades, a secret that will change the way she thinks about herself, her family, and her future.

Romantic, warm, and glamorous, moving from Edwardian England to the London Blitz to present day London, Dressing the Dearloves is a story of corrosiveness of family secrets, the insecurities that can sabotage our best efforts, and the seductive power of dressing up.



Kelly Doust has had much involvement in fashion and publishing so to write a fictional novel with fashion at its core seems like a natural progression.


Dressing the Dearloves is a rich multi-generational story that moves effortlessly from present-day to the late 1920’s through to the early 1940’s spanning five generations of Dearloves.

Sylvie Dearlove returns home to England, her life in New York in ruins. Her fashion label has crashed and she has been declared bankrupt. Haunted by failure and wracked by guilt she runs to the only place she feels safe, the family’s estate Bledesford, only to find it in rack and ruin her parents barely able to afford the upkeep. Doust highlights the dire straits some families found themselves in trying to keep up with mounting expenses on these rambling estates and the work of the National Trust in helping owners open their homes to the public for viewing, tea rooms and weddings.

The Dearlove women are all strong, outspoken women. They are all very arty and clothing and fashion is a passion passed down through the generations. All the beautiful gowns and day wear have been stored in the attic from the 1920’s through to the 1960’s. I loved how the items of clothing were tied to memorable moments in the Dearlove women’s lives and Doust seamlessly moved from an unearthed fashion piece to the relevant time and story concerning that piece.

Dressing the Dearloves is an engaging story of love and war and doing what’s expected in times where skeletons were pushed firmly to the back of the closet only to be released with a lot of poking and questions asked.

The story evolved with the unique addition of internet search items, newspaper excerpts and diary entries. I particularly liked the for sale advertisement for Bledesford which described the estate beautifully.

I was captivated by this story from beginning to end and my mind was reeling as the secrets just kept coming and coming.

My rating 5/5                🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

*This review is part of the Beauty & Lace Book Club.

Dressing the Dearloves is book #28 in the Australian Women Writers challenge
and part of the Book Lover Book Review Aussie Author Challenge



Photo courtesy of Goodreads
Since 2009, Kelly Doust has published five non-fiction books about craft and fashion: THE CRAFTY MINX, THE CRAFTY KID, A LIFE IN FROCKS: A MEMOIR, MINXY VINTAGE (all Murdoch Books) THE CRAFTY MINX AT HOME (HarperCollins). She has a background in book publishing and publicity, and has worked in the UK, Hong Kong and Australia and freelanced for magazines such as Vogue, Australian Women’s Weekly and Sunday Life Magazine. She currently lives in Sydney, Australia with her husband and daughter.





28 comments:

  1. Love historical fiction and this one sounds like a good one!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Great review, historical fiction is awesome

    ReplyDelete
  3. I enjoy historical fiction and think I would like this one. Great review!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think you would love it Nikki. Long held family secrets and a bit of a mystery.

      Delete
  4. This sounds lovely. I like historical fiction and this one sounds great.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Historical Fiction is fast becoming one of my favourite genres.

      Delete
  5. Excellent review! Glad this one was a win for you :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It had some of my favourite plot lines. Skeletons in the closet and a good mystery.

      Delete
  6. I seldom read this genre but you have me wanting this one - excellent review!

    ReplyDelete
  7. I just recently started liking historical fictions. This one sounds great :-)

    ReplyDelete
  8. Great review! Glad you enjoyed it!

    ReplyDelete
  9. I love historical fiction. This sounds like a great book,

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If you love Historical Fiction you are sure to love this book.

      Delete
  10. i do love historicals and had not heard of this before, will check it out.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If you love Historical Fiction you are sure to love this one.

      Delete
  11. Great review, I don't usually read book like this one but I am really intrigued about it, I am really glad you enjoy it fully though. Thank you so much for sharing your awesome post.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If you want to try Historical Fiction this is a good one to start with.

      Delete