Vivienne does not belong to the quiet.
She belongs to crowded theaters, rain-slicked streets, smoke-filled cafés, and the electric spaces where art, hunger, and ambition collide.
Paris, 1965, Vivienne moves through the city like a provocation—designing, seducing, observing, and being observed. Her lovers are artists, musicians, and dreamers. Her nights are public, her desires unapologetic, her body a language she refuses to censor.
When she becomes entangled with a magnetic musician and her ever-watchful artist confidant, desire begins to shift. What starts as indulgence becomes spectacle. What was private becomes charged with the thrill of exposure.
Vivienne learns that being wanted is one thing.
Being seen is another.
Sensual, atmospheric, and emotionally charged, Vivienne is an erotic novel about longing, performance, power, and the intoxicating danger of living without restraint.
This is not a love story.
It is a story of appetite.