Background
A native of France, Mireille Guiliano grew up in Rombas, Lorraine amidst cooks, chefs, and restaurateurs.
(Unlocks the secrets of 'The French paradox'. This title i...)
Unlocks the secrets of 'The French paradox'. This title includes advice, ideas and fresh French recipes for each season.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00FFBCNAO/?tag=2022091-20
(Now you can have it all, all year round...'Who can resist...)
Now you can have it all, all year round...'Who can resist a book that recommends love and chocolate as part of a balanced diet?' asked Allison Pearson in the Daily Telegraph about Guiliano's French Women Don't Get Fat, a mould-breaking book that unlocked the secrets of 'The French paradox' and sold well over a million copies worldwide. By letter, by email, in person, readers have inundated Mireille Guiliano with requests for more advice. Her answer: this buoyant new book full of advice, ideas and fresh, French recipes for each season.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0701180609/?tag=2022091-20
writer consumer products company executive
A native of France, Mireille Guiliano grew up in Rombas, Lorraine amidst cooks, chefs, and restaurateurs.
A native of France, Mireille Guiliano grew up in Rombas, Lorraine amidst cooks, chefs, and restaurateurs. Guiliano completed a year of her primary education as an exchange student in the United States (1966). She completed her secondary education in Paris, where she studied French and English literature at the Sorbonne Nouvelle (1966–1970) and received her Master"s degree.
She also attended the Institut Supérieur d"Interprétariat et de Traduction where she received a certification as a translator/interpreter.
Prior to becoming a full-time author, Guiliano was for over 20 years the spokesperson for Champagne Veuve Clicquot and a senior executive at Moët Hennessy — Louis Vuitton as well as Chief Executive Officer of Clicquot, Incorporated., the United States firm she helped found in 1984 and was its first employee. After publishing French Women Don’t Get Fat and French Women for All Seasons, Guiliano decided to retire from Cliquot, Incorporated. (Moët Hennessy — Louis Vuitton) and follow her new passion to become a full-time writer
She contributes articles on food, wine, travel, and lifestyle to a wide range of publications, including Town & Country and The Quarterly Review of Wines.
Guilano"s French Women series has been criticized for promoting a stereotype of French women, failing to mention the main reasons for differences in obesity rates between France and the United States of America, promoting unhealthy attitudes towards food, promoting an elitist view of female beauty and just poor writing. The British journalist Zoë Williams also singled her out for criticism in her article "Cherchez la femme", with particular criticism directed at her catchphrase "la moitié, s"il vous plaît" ("just give me half of that, please").
In 2007, Guiliano was voted as one of New York"s Worst Bosses on Gawker.com.
(Unlocks the secrets of 'The French paradox'. This title i...)
(Now you can have it all, all year round...'Who can resist...)
(2nd ptg)
Member of Committee of 200.
Married Edward Guiliano.