On Hist Fic Saturday
Let's go back to....Paris, 1938
Simon and Schuster UK November 2018 My thanks to the publicists edpr for my copy of this book |
The story starts in Paris in
1930, when a devastating family tragedy occurs when twins, Florence and Romaine
Duchamps are teenagers, only for the story to then flip forwards to 1938 when
the twins are living very different lives. Socialite, Florence is married to a
powerful business man and she has a five year old child, whilst Romaine is a
female aviatrix who regularly risks her safety to take to the air in her
flimsy, Gypsy Moth, aeroplane. That, Romaine is risking much more than her
safety in the skies becomes apparent in her interaction with those who are
fearful of the shadowy threat posed by Hitler in the dangerous months before the
outbreak of WW2.
The story is compelling, from its
decidedly dark beginning, through to the description of life in Paris for both
Florence and Romaine. The sisters may be bonded by their birth but they are
separated by their lifestyles and the secrets they keep from each other. The
action is exciting, particularly Romaine's story as she gets drawn further and
further into a dark underworld and yet, Florence's life is equally compelling,
as she mingles with the social elite of pre-war, Paris.
The Betrayal is a truly compelling
read, not just for the description of the relationship between the sisters, but
also for the accuracy of the historical background which explains the build up
to the outbreak of war, and of the steady increase in restlessness and apprehension
which pervaded all levels of society. The author writes well and certainly
brings time and place alive with an authenticity I found fascinating. The action
is fast and furious and doesn't shy away from revealing danger and violence and
of the consequences of actions which have devastating repercussions for both
Florence and Romaine.
This is well written historical fiction
which has an absorbing edginess which lasts throughout the whole of the story, from its startling beginning, through to its timely and dramatic conclusion.
Twitter @KateFurnivall
#TheBetrayal
@simonschusterUK
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