By Beth Schreibman Gehring
“I picked up the bottle of L’Heure Bleu and poured a generous puddle into the palm of my hand. Rubbing my hands briskly together before the scent could evaporate, I smoothed them rapidly through my hair. I poured another dollop onto my hairbrush and swept the curls back behind my ears with it.
Well. That was rather better, I thought, turning my head from side to side to examine the results in the speckled looking glass. The moisture had dissipated the static electricity in my hair, so that it floated in heavy, shining waves about my face. And the evaporating alcohol had left behind a very pleasant scent. Frank would like that, I thought. L’Heure Bleu was his favorite.”
Excerpt From: Diana Gabaldon. “Outlander.”
Everyone who knows me at all , knows that I’ve had an obsession with Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander Series for at least the last 20 years. There are 8 books in all beginning with the first one Outlander which is set simultaneously in Inverness Scotland in 1945 and 1745! This is a series that has something for everyone, history, England , Scotland, the most outstanding love affair ever written , amazing leading men and women and yes, plenty of captivating, knee crossing , heaving bosom , heavy breathing, sweating, panting , begging sexuality.
Warning. Anyone who thought that 50 Shades of Gray was provocative is not sexually mature enough for this delicious story!
To make a long story very short (and so as to not ruin it for anyone who is provoked enough to read them, A lovely young nurse in her twenties Claire Beauchamp Randall is on a second honeymoon with her husband Frank. They’ve been separated by the war and have seen each other only 3 times in 6 years. Frank is a historian who is absolutely obsessed with his ancestor, the monstrously awful Captain Jack (That’s Black Jack”) Randall. One day, while Frank is busy researching his family tree, Claire goes back to Craigh na Dun, a megalithic Scottish standing stone circle, to pick a bit of gentian violet for her plant press. She wanders around the circle and hears a strong buzzing noise, much like a swarm of angry bees and is quickly drawn to the cleft between two stones. The rest is herstory! Claire finds herself tumbling through time and into the arms of her husbands notorious relative and is rescued by a band of Scots Highlanders, and especially one, James Alexander Malcolm MacKenzie Fraser, a young and exceeding wonderful although outlawed Scottish laird.
I’m not telling you the rest. The best news is that a TV show is being made of the first book (the trailer is above so get ready to feast your eyes!) by Starz and will begin in August. There’s also an 8th book due out in June entitled “Written in my own hearts blood. “ Each book takes Ms. Gabaldon at least 4 years to write. They are so worth the wait!
Claire’s perfume is Guerlains magnificent L’ Heure Bleue, which is also her husband Franks favorite. It also happens to be one of mine, which makes it very easy for me to channel my inner Claire Randall at anytime. L’Heure Bleue translates into “The Blue Hour” or perhaps even more appropriately , The Gloaming which is Middle English for that heady blue sky space that occurs between dusk and eve where the sun has set, but nightfall has not yet appeared.
L’Heure Bleue is what might be called a Floral/Oriental, but to me it is simply one of the most romantic perfumes that I’ve ever smelled. To begin there is exotic aniseed and bergamot and not just a little bit of Neroli which makes the beginnings of this perfume deceptively ephemeral but quickly L’Heure Bleue’s , becomes very exotic as the Tonka bean, Iris and Benzoin blend with its sexy vanilla heart. L’ Heure Bleue dries down on my skin leaving a residue of boozy vanilla and musk. When brushed through the hair as Claire does in the passage above, the chemistry created is almost unbearable.
If you haven’t smelled LHB in a while I encourage you to give it a twirl again. It requires a heart open to adventure , romance and passion. It is not a young woman’s perfume, but then again Claire Randall was/has never been a young woman. My only sadness is that this glorious fragrance was wasted on her absolutely useless husband Frank.
Jamie Fraser would have been utterly spellbound by it and that’s all that I’m going to say. You'll have to discover him for yourself........