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January 1, 2023
From Benedict and Murray, the New York Times best-selling authors of the Good Morning America Book Club pick The Personal Librarian, The First Ladies assays the relationship between First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and civil rights activist Mary McLeod Bethune, whose parents were once enslaved. In theNew York Times best-selling Harmel's The Paris Daughter, Elise must go into hiding when the Germans occupy Paris during World War II and entrusts her young daughter to friend Juliette--their two girls are close--only to discover at war's end that Juliette has vanished and only one girl (but which one?) survived a bombing. In lates 1700s India, 17-year-old Abbas works under French clockmaker Lucien du Leze to create a massive tiger automaton for Tipu Sultan (called the Tiger of Mysore), then returns to apprentice with du Leze in France and eventually heads to England to rescue his tiger, which British forces treated as Loot; James'sThe Tusk That Did the Damage was a San Francisco Chronicle best book. Wandering through devastated post-World War II France, Asher finds sanctuary (but hides his Jewish identity) at The Glass Ch�teau, where glass is being manufactured to replace the shattered windows of postwar France's cathedrals: award-winning journalist/novelist Kiernan was inspired by the life of Marc Chagall. In the New York Times best-selling See's Lady Tan's Circle of Women, Yunxian is trained by her physician grandmother in 15th-century China and works with a young midwife, but an arranged marriage threatens to confine her to a life of wifely subordination. Following Tsukiyama's much-praised The Color of Air, The Brightest Star reimagines the life of Anna May Wong, the only Asian American woman to achieve fame in Hollywood's early days. In the New York Times best-selling Williams's The Beach at Summerly, caretaker's daughter Emilia Winthrop is thrilled when charismatic role model Olive Rainsford arrives at Winthrop Island's Summerly estate in 1946, then is thrown into turmoil when she learns that someone at Summerly is transmitting secrets to the Soviets.
Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
Starred review from April 3, 2023
The friendship between two American expats in WWII Paris leads to life-altering events in the powerful latest from Harmel (The Forest of Vanishing Stars). It’s 1939, and Elise LeClair, an American artist married to French artist Olivier, is pregnant with their first child and has newly befriended Juliette Foulon, an American bookseller who is expecting her third child with her husband, Paul. After the Germans invade and LeClairs’ daughter, Mathilde, is born, Elise begs Oliver to keep a lower profile with his work with the Resistance, but in 1941 he’s arrested and beaten to death by the Nazis. His art dealer tells Elise the Germans are looking for her, forcing her to flee and leave Mathilde with Juliette. After the war, Elise finds the Foulons’ bookstore reduced to rubble, and she learns that only Juliette and her youngest child Lucie survived the Allied bomb that killed Paul, their two older children, and Mathilde. Overcome with guilt, Elise struggles to move forward as an artist. Years later, Elise tracks down Juliette and Lucie in New York City, where her effort to seek closure is particularly wrenching. Harmel brings the novel’s historical moments to life through deep research and enriching historical facts, and she conveys an acute sense of her characters’ emotions as they face tragedy upon tragedy. This is Harmel’s best to date. Agent: Holly Root, Root Literary.
May 15, 2023
In a complex story of love and redemption, the lives of three women and their children are entwined during WWII and the 20 years that follow. Juliette and Elise, American expats living in Paris, have a friendship that begins when both are pregnant. Ruth, who is Jewish, is in greater peril and sends her children away, aiming to escape Paris herself. Elise's artist husband is tortured and killed by the Nazis, forcing her to escape as well, leaving her daughter, Mathilde, to become part of Juliette's family. The family book shop is destroyed by bombing; only Juliette and daughter Lucie survive. The three women emerge at the end of the war, damaged in their own ways but still connected. Elise mourns by making and selling wood carvings, Ruth and her children live with her for a time, and Juliette relocates to New York but with her mind still in the past. The story finishes in NYC in 1960. Wartime drama is condensed to the personal level here, with much to recommend this to the public-library audience and book-discussion groups.
COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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