2024 the best fiction books review


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(as of Dec 17, 2024 17:42:10 UTC - Details)

A Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, and Amazon Charts best seller.

From the best-selling author of The Beekeeper’s Promise comes a gripping story of three young women faced with impossible choices. How will history - and their families - judge them?

Paris, 1940. With the city occupied by the Nazis, three young seamstresses go about their normal lives as best they can. But all three are hiding secrets. War-scarred Mireille is fighting with the Resistance; Claire has been seduced by a German officer; and Vivienne’s involvement is something she can’t reveal to either of them.

Two generations later, Claire’s English granddaughter Harriet arrives in Paris, rootless and adrift, desperate to find a connection with her past. Living and working in the same building on the Rue Cardinale, she learns the truth about her grandmother - and herself - and unravels a family history that is darker and more painful than she ever imagined.

In wartime, the three seamstresses face impossible choices when their secret activities put them in grave danger. Brought together by loyalty, threatened by betrayal, can they survive history’s darkest era without being torn apart?

Reviewer: Beverly B Sloan
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Enthralling and Heartrendering!
Review: I enjoyed the detail and the loving story of these women. They lived in a desperate time, but worked whole heartedly for the good of their country. Folks need to be reminded of how horrendous the Nazi's treated human beings. Also of how deligent folks were in very hard times.

Reviewer: J F A
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Love the authentic setting of the story!
Review: 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.

Reviewer: Jean ann
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: what a story
Review: A story showing the strength, courage, resilience, and love of 3 women whose lives were impacted by one of the most significant events of world history. An amazing read.

Reviewer: Mom of 2 Aug Girls
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: An excellent WW2 novel
Review: While this novel is a WW2 historical fiction story, it is refreshingly different than others I’ve read. This story alternates between Harriet in present day and her grandmother’s story in Paris beginning with the German occupation of Paris. And there is the underlying thread of fashion throughout both. The beginning was a little slow but it picked up and I loved how the stories intertwined. I love Harriet’s fresh, honest, and tough ponderings as she mourns her mother’s death and tries to find out who she is through her grandmother’s story. If you like historical fiction, please consider picking this one up!

Reviewer: Paper
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: 3.5 stars- rounded up
Review: This novel follows other modern historical fiction trends: the modern-day character, Harriet, finds an old photograph in box that shows her grandmother as a young lady with two other girls, and Harriet then makes it her goal to uncover the past of her familial history concerning her grandmother, Claire.The first chapter was very cliché. Harriet moves to Paris obtaining a job in the same building that her grandmother, Claire, worked in. And, she settles in the same apartment that her grandmother lived in. And, Harriet’s roommate in that apartment happens to be the granddaughter of one of the girls in the picture who also lived in that same apartment. But the story does get better and becomes entertaining.The synopsis provided is accurate, for the most part. The three seamstresses in 1940, Claire (Harriet’s grandmother), Mireille, and Vivienne, live together in a small apartment and slowly develop a trusted friendship. Their involvement with the resistance is mostly limited to courier, depending on the character, though they do assistant in helping people out of German-occupied France to safety. With none of them being Jewish, the Jew’s oppression is merely a backdrop in the story and is only mentioned occasionally. It does provide some insight into Flossenburg camp, not as a Jew but as a traitor.I did not enjoy Harriet’s chapters as much. They seemed like “fillers” and at times the story could be followed easily without having read some of Harriet’s chapters. However, her chapters are not long, so it is bearable. In Harriet’s chapters she mostly recounts the previous chapter of what was revealed to her about her grandmother. She also struggles to cope with the loss of her mother to suicide, and frequently Harriet questions if she has inherited trauma genes.Overall, I liked the story and found it to be a light, quick, average read that at times intensified. It focused on the girl’s relationship development and their work as a seamstress in Nazi-occupied Paris until approximately 45% (on a Kindle). The plot then heightens again at 61 % (on a Kindle). It does have interesting tidbits of historical information lightly sprinkled here and there.There are an abundance of fashion references and scenes related to the Paris fashion industry. There were no sex scenes, use of vulgar language, or explicit violence.3.5 stars

Reviewer: Gregory P. Smith, author of Seeking Courage
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: A very well researched and written novel. Valpy manages the time travel between eras in a realistic way, moving between the 1940s and current times fluently. At times the scenes are gripping, and overall the entire story flows seamlessly from beginning to end.

Reviewer: Karina Briceño Pachas
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Me atrapó por completo este libro me encantó.

Reviewer: sue
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: The dressmakers gift what a wonderful book. Really, sad, very touching also. The war was a terrible thing the story is so compassionate and full of love, despite everything

Reviewer: Sekhmet49
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: The Dressmaker is a real page turner, bringing you both the pleasure of a well written story with complex characters among different times, and the reminder of a tragic time, less than hundred years ago.Somehow, you'll be left speechless, sometimes crying, sometimes smiling, always invested. An excellent book, and a enjoyable way to remember…

Reviewer: Kindle Customer
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: It was a beautiful book. The author was able to do justice to the era, the trials faced in those times. It is a story of courage, of acknowledging that cruelty has no name or religion but the love of life can still triumph over it all. To never forgo the courage, to choose life and live it with all you have.

Customers say

Customers find the book engaging and well-written. They describe the story as remarkable, touching, and beautiful. The writing quality is described as descriptive and easy to read, with few grammar or punctuation mistakes. Readers find the emotional content moving and heartfelt, dealing openly with deep trauma and loss. They appreciate the strong female characters and their depth. The storytelling keeps them engrossed and spellbound. Customers find the book thought-provoking and insightful, dealing with the cruelties of the era.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

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