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D**.
Great read!
I truly enjoyed this book. Fiona did a great job of developing the characters. I felt like the story was based on real people. I felt like she stayed in line with the facts of what happened during World War II.
J**A
Love the authentic setting of the story!
Book Review: The Dressmaker's Gift by Fiona Valpy2017. In first person narrative, Harriet from England, a newly accepted fashion intern or "stagiaire" in Paris, searches obsessively for the history of her grandmother after she finds an old photo of her as a young woman with two companions.1940-1945. In third person omniscient, Harriet gives a detailed account of the exploits of three French seamstresses in a couturier's atelier in Paris - Mireille from the Pyrenees, Vivienne from Lille, and Claire from Brittany, and their harrowing experiences during the Nazi occupation as Special Operations Executive (SOE) agents of the French Resistance.In every chapter after the first, Harriet repeatedly reminisces about the grandma she never knew, which felt largely like maudlin interlude fillers barely contributing to the flow.Furthermore, it is hard for the reader to understand how Harriet in 2017 could have known the thoughts, deeds and feelings of her granny and the women. Although dramatic and entirely engaging, the incredulity renders the account concocted and contrived right through the final chapters, when Harriet finally meets Mireille. But still, Mireille couldn't have been cognizant of details, for example, during Claire's and Vivi's internment.As a Francophile who lived in Paris, I love the authentic setting of the story. The address 12 Rue Cardinale in the 9th Arrondissement of Paris is indeed about a fifteen minute leisurely walk to Ile de la Cite as mentioned in the book. That Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris is in the exact spot is a bonus. It's not a fashionable area but a couturier's atelier or workshop could be anywhere in the district.The story's timeline is spotted a dash of creative license. This was famously a time of turmoil for Parisiens, with the Charlie Hebdo terrorist attack in January 2015, the Bataclan Theater massacre (138 dead) in November 2015, and the terrorist truck attack (86 dead) in Nice on Bastille Day on July 14, 2016. All three are mentioned in the book. A subsequent attack directly involves Harriet and her friend, Simone, which proves key to the plot.The mental state of a person living in Paris during this time, apart from day to day living, would concede little time for concern and research much less be melancholy about an unknown grandmother. Moreover, all three attacks predate the prologue, so we'll have to assume Harriet first arrived in Paris earlier in 2015.Finally, I cannot imagine anyone with Breton blood not be knowledgeable of their ancestry from the day of birth. The Bretons are fiercely proud of their Celtic heritage. In fact, most consider themselves Breton before French, regardless where they live.Claire, Harriet's grandma was a full-blooded Breton.A tale far from compelling, but writing par excellence and good light reading.Review based on an Amazon First Reads edition, and an Advance Reading Copy from Amazon Publishing UK and Lake Union Publishing through NetGalley.
G**.
Great story!
It was very captivating the way the author went from the past to the future.I highly recommend it for anyone looking for a good read.
S**K
fantastic and opened my eyes to inherited trauma
Deeply heart wrenching as these brave women clung to life in such adversity. Believable,touching and mind boggling at the same time.
D**A
Paris during Nazi occupation in WWII
At the heart of it, this book is about Paris during Nazi occupation in WWII. The story involves three young seamstresses who get involved in the Resistance; their stories reveal daily life of the working class and the brutal conditions of war as well as the courage and determination of people who fought back. WWII was less than 80 years ago yet many Americans are unfamiliar with the ways it impacted all of Europe. This engaging story brings a piece of that history to light.The author uses a split time frame to tell the story, dividing chapters between a contemporary young woman who goes to Paris to learn about her grandmother and the story of the grandmother herself. For me, that technique was less than effective. The strength of the book lies in the historical story of the grandmother; many chapters about the contemporary storyline were so short they simply served as disruptions. The beginning and ending pages are contemporary and effectively frame the book but I wish the author had used a different strategy for the substantive heart of the story.I also felt like the ending dragged on and on. After the story of the grandmother concludes, the author brings us back to the present with a weak storyline that serves primarily as a forum for lecturing the reader, pounding the same moralistic points again and again. Give up. If readers haven't figured out these issues already, a long last-minute lecture is not going to get through to them. That entire last section could be reduced by half.In spite of those limitations, this is a good book. It was engaging and easy to read, and the messages about war and resistance are important to remember.
K**1
Women Inspired Novel Set In Paris During WW 2
A well written book is taken to the next next step because of the situations the women find themselves in the German occmupation of Paris. It traces the choices that each takes and their motivations. The characters and their relationships are developed with care and patience. Allowing for the development of a natural deep and forever love of survivors.I became aware of a different part of WW2.Warning: There is some explicit description of what occurred in the concentration camps. I was caught unaware and had to adgust. Please read author's postscript.
P**E
A good story of women helping women
This was a good story of the strength of friendship and encouragement. It took me a while to get into the story and the “Harriet” chapters bogged it down for me. Otherwise, I did like it.It is about a young woman in search of answers. She winds up learning a great deal about her grandmother and the woman she is named after. Both of those women were part of the resistance during WWII and wound up in a couple of concentration camps. They experienced horrible situations, but stood strong for each other to the end.
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