Book Review Club: The Book of Lost Names by Kristin Harmel #ww2fiction #review

The Book of Lost Names cover

The Book of Lost Names
by Kristin Harmel
Gallery Books, Simon & Schuster, 2020

Set mostly in France, this is the story of Eva Traube, a French Jew of Polish descent. The book starts in 2005 with the elderly Eva, a librarian in Winter Park, FL. She sees a photo of a book she hasn’t seen for 40 years, a book looted by the Nazis during WWII. What makes the book notable is an intriguing puzzle inside the book, one that Eva put there during her days as a forger for the French resistance. She heads to Berlin to claim the book.

Then we go back to 1942 and most of the book is devoted to Eva’s flight from Paris and her relocation to a French village in the mountains not far from the Swiss border where she works as a forger for the Resistance and meets the love of her life, Remy. She also forges new papers with false identities for Jewish children who are being smuggled across the Swiss border. Bus she doesn’t want the children’s real names lost to history, so she and Remy figure out a way to record the names using a code in a very old religious book, one no one would pick up just to read.

I don’t want to say much more except I loved this book. Fascinating story line, exciting and very emotional. Recommended for fans of WWII fiction and women’s fiction.

Linda McLaughlin

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Book Review Club: The Art of Inheriting Secrets by Barbara O’Neal #review

Art of Inheriting Secrets cover

This book was recommended by mystery author Kate Carlisle, so when I saw it was available for free at Amazon on Prime Reading, I read it, and I’m so glad I did. I had recently finished reading a literary novel with tons of dry narrative, so I was delighted to find a book written by a master storyteller. I was able to relax and immerse myself in the world O’Neal so vividly created. Later I realized that Barbara O’Neal used to write historical romance as Barbara Samuel, whose books I had loved. Why publishers feel they have to hide a writer’s romance roots, I will never understand.

The Art of Inheriting Secrets: A Novel
by Barbara O’Neal
Lake Union Publishing, 2018

When food editor Olivia Shaw’s mother dies, she learns that her mom, who never talked about her background, has left her an estate in England. An honest-to-god landed estate, complete with crumbling manor house, a ruined abbey and a title. Reeling from grief and shock, the new Countess of Rosemere flies to England to assess her inheritance and discovers more secrets.

Olivia doesn’t intend to fall in love with England, not to mention trying to resist the charms of a certain Indian-American author, but lately nothing in her life has gone according to plan. Some of the locals she encounters help her, while others work to actively undermine her. She runs into lots of pitfalls and obstacles, but also finds joy and a sense of belonging.

The book is so well-written, the characters seem real, and the description is wonderful, esp. Olivia’s lyrical descriptions of the food she eats, befitting a food editor.

Highly recommended for fans of women’s fiction, Downton Abbey, or anyone just wanting a feel good read.

Wishing you all a happy and safe holiday season.

Linda McLaughlin

As always, click on the link below for more great reviews in Barrie Summy’s Book Review Club!

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book review blogs
@Barrie Summy

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