In October, 2024, we spent a couple of days in a Dallas B&B that had its own version of a Little Free Library inside the rental. A sign on the container invited us to take a book or two with us when we left, and to leave something behind if we had anything to contribute. The Paris Library is one of two books I took home with me at the end of that weekend, but I’ve just now gotten around to reading it. I tend to read a steady diet of historical fiction, and was a little burned out on World War II fiction, so I ended up putting the book aside when we got home - and immediately forgot I even had it until stumbling upon it a couple of weeks ago. (I still haven’t read the second book.)
The Paris Library was published in 2021 by Atria Books (a Simon & Schuster imprint) and runs 351 pages long, including the Author’s Note. My impressions are mostly positive ones for this well-researched account of how the American Library functioned in Paris during World War II:
- Will appeal to a broad audience of readers
- Centers on a handful of nicely developed characters who evolve and change during the course of the novel
- Uses flashbacks to the main story while occasionally visiting the main character some forty years in the future
- The American Library almost becomes a central character itself
- Explores the difficult choices Parisians were forced to make during the Nazi occupation of the city - and the hypocrisy of those who sometimes benefited from the tough choices made by others
- Based on historical figures, letters, and memories of those who were there
- Intensively researched for accuracy
| Inside The American Library in Paris |
| Photo of The American Library featured in the novel |

