This is one of the most fun blog tours I have participated in. There are so many additional materials that make this a super fun post. I can’t wait to share them with you. Thank you, Maria Vitale and St. Martin’s for inviting me to participate. I’m hosting a giveaway for a paperback copy of Paris Never Leaves You, so keep scrolling to find out how to enter!
“Masterful. Magnificent. A passionate story of survival and a real page turner. This story will stay with me for a long time.” —Heather Morris, author of The Tattooist of Auschwitz and Cilka’s Journey
Living through World War II working in a Paris bookstore with her young daughter, Vivi, and fighting for her life, Charlotte is no victim, she is a survivor. But can she survive the next chapter of her life?
Alternating between wartime Paris and 1950s New York publishing, Ellen Feldman’s Paris Never Leaves You is an extraordinary story of resilience, love, and impossible choices, exploring how survival never comes without a cost.
The war is over, but the past is never past.
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Author Bio and Interview
ELLEN FELDMAN, a 2009 Guggenheim fellow, is the author of Terrible Virtue, The Unwitting, Next to Love, Scottsboro (shortlisted for the Orange Prize), The Boy Who Loved Anne Frank (translated into nine languages), and Lucy. Her novel Terrible Virtue was optioned by Black Bicycle for a feature film.
Many of your previous books dealt with real characters, such as Anne Frank. Where did the fictional Charlotte and her moral dilemma come from?
Charlotte came from her moral dilemma. Most books about the women of World War II feature those who displayed enviable, or hard to fathom, courage -women who spied for the Allies or worked in the Resistance or risked their lives covering the action. I stand in awe of those figures. But as I read those accounts, I kept wondering, what did women who were not blessed, or cursed, with such guts, do? What would I do if faced with choices between what is conventionally thought of as right and wrong, moral and immoral? It is, I suppose, the eternal question of the bystander. Charlotte is, if not my answer to it, then my exploration of it.
Yes, but how did Charlotte, the particular character in the novel, come into being?
I find all my characters, even the historical figures-because, of course, they’re not the real historical figures, only my understanding, and representation of them-come into being the same way. When I begin a book, I have in mind a vague character defined mainly by name and circumstances, the individual’s history, and where I want her or him to go, though the latter rarely is where that character ends up going. Only as I get deeper into the story does the character begin to take on a reality of her or his own. Frequently the people on the page refuse to do things I’d intended to have them do. They make it clear, as the writing goes on, that a particular action or emotion is not in keeping with who they have become.
You list some of the sources you relied upon in researching Paris Never Leaves You. Do you have a particular method for delving into the past?
I begin by reading general histories of the period, then go on to personal memoirs, magazines and newspapers, and archival material if there is any. I love getting lost in libraries, and I love the thrill of coming across a little- known or even previously unknown letter or diary entry or scrap of paper that brings the character or period to life. In a more general sense, even the ads in old newspapers and magazines can untether you from the present and pull you back to another time. Once, while reading an old magazine, I came across an ad for a sweater I thought would make a perfect Christmas gift for my husband. Only when I started to jot down the information did I realize that the magazine was from 1945, the store no longer existed, and the sweater I was so eager to buy had probably been eaten by moths decades ago.
Are some eras more difficult to research than others?
For some aspects of Paris Never Leaves You I had to do almost no research. Several years ago I worked in a New York City publishing house. While by that time the business had changed considerably from the 1950s, human nature hadn’t.
Does the research ever change your original conception of a book?
Absolutely. In Paris Never Leaves You, I had started out thinking about what Charlotte would do in certain situations and how she would live with the repercussions of her actions for the rest of her life. In other words, I was interested in survivor guilt, though I didn’t use the term to myself at the time because I think starting a novel with a highfalutin philosophical or psychological concept is the kiss of death for a good story. The library where I do most of my work has open stacks. One day, as I was looking for another book about France under the Occupation I came across two volumes, called 1-/itler’s Jewish Soldiers and Lives of I-litter’s Jewish Soldiers by Bryan Mark Rigg. I was so astonished I sat on the floor of the history stacks and began reading. What I found there not only altered but deepened and expanded the story I had set out to tell. Suddenly, I had the beginnings of a character I’d never dreamed of. more survivor guilt than I’d bargained for, and the additional issue of identity and how we perceive it.
At what point in the research do you begin writing? Where do you work? When do you work?
After a certain amount of time, and it differs with each book, I can’t keep the characters and the ideas in any longer. They’re shouting to get out of my head and onto the page. That’s the point and I’ve heard many writers use this image-at which I leave the research room, close the door behind me, and walk into the writing room. Closing the door is essential because in fiction, characters and story always trump history, and you don’t want the former to get lost in the latter. But there is a caveat. I sometimes have to go back to the research because, before I start the writing, I often have no idea what I’m looking for when I’m reading. Sometimes a stray fact that seemed irrelevant when I came across it inspires a scene or makes a character take a different course. So while the two processes are separate, they are also intertwined. I do the actual writing in the writer’s rooms of two libraries: The New York Society Library, which is a subscription library on the Upper East Side of Manhattan and New York City’s oldest library, and the New York Public Library. Both have silent oases for writers that I am fortunate to have access to. The walk to the library each morning gives me time to think about what I’m going to write that day, as does an early run around the Reservoir in Central Park; the walk home in the evening allows time to decompress, or, all too often, the eureka realization that the scene I spent the day writing simply doesn’t work and has to be either completely rethought or tossed out.
Are you currently at work on another book?
I am always at work on another book. The idea for the current work in progress sprang from two sentences about a character I came across in my research for Paris Never Leaves You, but that’s all I can say about her now.
A Toast to Paris While you Read
Readers; Guide Questions for Discussion
Historical Fiction is my most favorite genre, so this book was pretty perfect for me. Want to win a paperback copy of Paris Never Leaves You? Comment on this post and let me know your favorite genre. I will choose a winner on the 7th by noon. Due to shipping, giveaway limited to the US and Canada.
Read my review of Paris Never Leaves You here.
My favorite genre is Mystery.
This book sounds very good, I remember your review. Very cool that we learn some about the author in this post.
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I only started reading mystery and suspense 3 years ago. I had been seriously missing out.
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