Book description
âAnne Sebba has the nearly miraculous gift of combining the vivid intimacy of the lives of women during The Occupation with the history of the time. This is a remarkable book.â âEdmund de Waal, New York Times bestselling author of The Hare with the Amber Eyes
New York Times bestsellingâŠ
Why read it?
4 authors picked Les Parisiennes as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
How Parisians survived Nazi Occupationâto what extent they resisted or collaboratedâhas been debated for decades but Sebba looks through a new lens: What did Parisiennes, specifically, do during these years? She was just in time to interview some key women who, having survived concentration camps, went on to live defiantly long lives. Others wouldnât speak, still traumatised by their experiences. But Sebba has plenty to work with, and the pace at which she pulls it all together propels this bookâs sense of importance. One canât help but feel relieved that these stories have now been told. Some of itâŠ
From Katrina's list on the history of Paris (and Parisians).
Les Parisiennes lays out in graphic detail the significant inequities handed down throughout the war with regard to social, economic, and religious status for women of world war II Paris. Ms. Sebba uses a timeline of pre-, during, and post-world war II to paint a picture of what daily life was like depending on how much money you had or whom you knew. She uses real-life examples like Coco Chanel, Genevieve de Gaulle, and Edith Piaf to help the reader understand the consequences of various choices made during wartime.
From Elizabeth's list on WWII with unique plot lines and perspectives.
Living with the enemy, during the occupation, the women of Paris had to navigate their way between defiance and collusion. This grey area is brilliantly depicted in the interviews with the Parisiennes, as they swing between glamour and deprivation, fear and love. And then came liberation, followed by the years of recovery, retribution, and revenge. These womenâs true accounts inspired me for my second book.
From Ruth's list on living with the enemy.
If you love Les Parisiennes...
Ladies, what would you take if you had to flee your home suddenly? Clothes? Food? Sentimental objects? How would you manage if you had your period when enemy soldiers took you prisoner?
These are the kind of blindsiding questions we catch ourselves asking as we read Anne Sebbaâs engrossing study of the way French women lived and loved through the Second World War. Drawing on first-hand interviews with a range of remarkable women, Sebbaâs skill lies in the way she focuses on intimate, everyday details to which we can all relate. The result is a book which reaches through timeâŠ
From Catherine's list on France and women since the Revolution.
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