Paris Echo
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5.0 • 2 Ratings
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
An urgent and enthralling new novel about injustice and betrayal from the author of Birdsong and A Week in December.
Set in 2006, Paris Echo follows Hannah, a thirty-one-year-old American post-doctoral researcher looking into the lives of women during the German Occupation of Paris in 1940-44, and Tariq, a nineteen-year-old boy who has run away from his home in Morocco, searching for sex and adventure.
Through their culture clash we are taken back into the hidden Paris of the Dark Years, the Algerian War and the simmering discontents of the banlieue. As both main characters fight to preserve their integrity and their sanity, they find their future shaped by the lives of the dead, by the ghosts of the Paris Metro.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Faulks (A Week in December) immerses readers into a haunted Paris through the exhilarating stories of a teenage Moroccan immigrant and an American historian researching the experiences of women during the German occupation of WWII. Hannah spent a lonely year abroad as a college student in Paris, and as she reconnects to the city and her past two decades later she becomes overwhelmed by the combined despair of her subjects and her own lonely life. Meanwhile, Tariq, a 19-year-old runaway from Morocco, wants to live in Paris like his mother, who was born there and died when he was a young boy. A mutual friend introduces Tariq to Hannah, and she agrees to take him on as boarder. While Hannah listens to the voices of Parisian women through historic recordings that she struggles to understand, Tariq explores Paris and picks up part-time jobs around the Muslim district. One of his employers, an Algerian man, speaks with unschooled Tariq about the French-Algerian War, explaining how Tariq's half-Algerian mother's life fits in within the bloody history. As Tariq and Hannah become closer, he helps her translate the French witness testimonies, slowly creating a dependency and bond as the translation work becomes more involved. As the atrocities of war are unearthed, Hannah and Tariq both must reconsider their beliefs about democracy and the role of Paris within the war. Fans of Paula McClain and Ian McEwan will enjoy Faulks's touching tale of two Parisian visitors looking to reimagine their self-identities in a changing world.