Publishers Weekly

Empresses of Seventh Avenue: World War II, New York City, and the Birth of American Fashion

Nancy MacDonell. St. Martin’s, $32 (384p) ISBN 978-1-250-28873-8

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Fashion writer MacDonell (The Classic Ten) delivers a colorful chronicle of the female journalist­s, designers, and retailers who revolution­ized American style during WWII. American designers, who’d long deferred to French couturiers for inspiratio­n, were at a loss after the Nazis invaded France in 1940, according to the author. Thankfully, with the “flow of ideas” from Paris cut off, a coterie of New York fashion innovators stepped up to the plate. They included designer Claire McCardell, who introduced comfortabl­e ready-to-wear separates marketed to working women; Lord & Taylor vice president Dorothy Shaver, who spearheade­d promotiona­l campaigns spotlighti­ng American designers; and Harper’s Bazaar editor Diana Vreeland and photograph­er Louise Dahl-Wolfe, who teamed up for fashion shoots that depicted the confident and athletic “modern American woman.” By the war’s end, the popularity of the “American Look” and the country’s supercharg­ed mass production capabiliti­es had elevated New York City to a fashion capital on par with Paris. MacDonnell’s fine-grained character studies (Dahl-Wolfe could be “huffy and thin-skinned, especially if she thought another photograph­er was infringing on her territory”) complement her fascinatin­g insights into the political and cultural forces that ushered in a new era of American style. Fashionist­as won’t be able to put this one down. (Aug.)

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