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Now and Then: On History, Mystery, and Memory

Berenice Abbott’s 1930s New York

Berenice Abbott’s 1930s New York

Looks like sunny spring Sundays are not for writing. This morning, on the middle of a sentence, I had a sudden irresistible urge to research New York in the 1930s, which is where my novel begins. And what better to immerse myself in than my latest find, the New York Public Library’s dog-earred copy of […]

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Nostalgic for Old Paris?

Nostalgic for Old Paris?

Awestruck at the majestic sweep of the grand Paris boulevards, we tend to forget that the city was, until fairly recently, a cramped medieval labyrinth of twisting cobbled alleys and ancient crumbling buildings. When in the 1870s Haussmann commenced his massive modernization, photographer Charles Marville was there with his big unwieldy camera to document it. […]

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First day of spring

First day of spring

By mid-afternoon, after hours of crafting and deleting sentences at the computer, my brain is stale and flat as yesterday’s club soda. Even my characters, struggling through the dramas of 1936 in Paris, are begging for a break. Time for a walk in nature. My Yosemite, my Niagra Falls, my Amazon River, is Central Park. […]

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For Olympics, dictators get out their feather dusters

For Olympics, dictators get out their feather dusters

A good host always tidies up the house before the guests arrive. But some hosts have more to shove into the closet than others. For the 1936 Olympics, Hitler got busy sweeping the more blatant horrors of his regime under the rug. He even went so far as to remove official anti-Jewish signs from Berlin […]

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The spy who guided me

The spy who guided me

Spies lurked everywhere in Paris 1936,crouching behind the croissants, whispering behind their whiskies, sneaking under the snails. Nazis spies, of course, but also Italian, British, Red Russians, White Russians, and equal-opportunity spies who would work for the highest bidder, no matter what their politics. Plenty of American spies, too, of course, posing behind respectable facades […]

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A gesture to unite all mankind

A gesture to unite all mankind

In the 1930s refugees poured into France, fleeing Hitler’s reign of terror in Germany . Mainly Jews, but also gays, communists, radicals, intellectuals — all those persecuted by the Nazis found a home in France. At least, that is,  until the Germans occupied France in 1940 and set up their puppet Vichy regime. Yet France, this […]

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How I met Henri Cartier-Bresson

How I met Henri Cartier-Bresson

In 1989, I moved to Paris. I didn’t yet know the city, and in my imagination, it was the magical, mysterious black-and-white place portrayed by such great masters of photography as Brassai, Kertesz, and Cartier-Bresson. I quickly needed a furnished apartment to rent for 6 months, but was discouraged to find only dreary flats crammed […]

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“The Lady Vanishes”…and reappears

“The Lady Vanishes”…and reappears

Just saw Hitchcock’s delicious 1938 mystery, “The Lady Vanishes.” The genre is that seemingly impossible contradiction in terms, a comic thriller. It’s all about spying, of course, which was the great theme of the pre-war years. Spoiler alert! Miss Froy, the kindly old English governess turns out to be a British spy, trying to get a […]

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Sailing to Europe in 1936

Sailing to Europe in 1936

In 1936, to get to Europe from the US, you had to sail. It took a bit less than a week, and crossing the tempestuous Atlantic was not for the faint of heart. Gladys’s diary publishers included a helpful guide to life on board ship, remedies for the dreaded seasickness, and advice on hat pools, in […]

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“The Minotaur in Paris,” a new historical novel, coming soon!

“The Minotaur in Paris,” a new historical novel, coming soon!

Suspense, espionage, betrayal, and love, as darkness falls over the City of Light… Read here  to see why this book had to be written. Enjoy a taste of the start of a dangerous adventure into the labyrinth…  

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Fascinated by the 30s? Events you’ll want to see.

Novel of a wardrobe: A chic Parisienne from the Belle Epoque through the Thirties Musée Carnavalet, Paris 17 october 2013 – 16 March 2014 Fabulous fashions to dream about, relating the story of a woman of exquisite taste — and the means to indulge it. Daughter of a dressmaker, she was one of the first saleswomen […]

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For 68 years, a Paris apartment hid its secrets.

For 68 years, a Paris apartment hid its secrets.

The facts are tantalizingly few. When in 2010 a 91-year-old woman died in the south of France, her estate was found to include a Paris apartment, situated somewhere between Pigalle and the Opera. The woman, Madame de Florian, had abandoned it in 1942, and for nearly 70 years, the forgotten apartment lay in darkness and […]

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