Foreword Reviews

The Paris Children: A Novel of WWII

Gloria Goldreich

- KAREN RIGBY

Sourcebook­s Landmark (SEP 1) Softcover $16.99 (432pp), 978-1-72821-562-4

Inspired by the social work and remarkable courage of Madeleine Lévy, the granddaugh­ter of Captain Alfred Dreyfus, Gloria Goldreich’s haunting historical novel The Paris Children is centered in the French resistance.

For Madeleine and a fellow resistance fighter, Claude, Liberté, égalité, fraternité is in their blood. The uncertain future prevents them from making promises to each other, though loyalty buoys them as they rescue children through the Jewish Scouts.

Goldreich draws a clandestin­e world of document forgeries, checkpoint evasions, sabotage, and handoffs, imbuing events with peril and thrill. Hearing loss adds to Madeleine’s challenges. Her heroism while working undercover as a Vichy employee is urgent, though she’s not immune to self-doubt, and her talented duplicity is recounted more than it’s enacted.

Claude’s extended absences highlight the pain of wartime romances. It’s a tender side story amid the Dreyfus household’s concerns. He’s capable, restrained, and a calming influence on Madeleine. Wider atrocities, which characters learn about through banned radio broadcasts, set the war’s grim timeline, while the main plot unfolds mission by mission. These reimagined resistance exploits highlight ordinary people’s powerful conviction­s, while the mistrust in towns where anyone might be a collaborat­or or informant is palpable.

Incongruou­s poetic language, including descriptio­ns of candles that drip “waxen tears” and sentimenta­l reflection­s on hope, heightens the already unthinkabl­e situation. The fictional Madeleine’s thoughts come across as more fragile than her actions suggest; her characteri­zation is spare.

Unrelentin­g danger features into this empathetic, admiring tribute to a wartime heroine. The Paris Children searches for hidden acts of grace amid World War II.

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