Tuesday, June 27, 2023

The Paris Deception by Bryn Turnbull

A special thank you to HarperCollins Canada for a copy of the book in exchange for an honest review.

Art restorer Sophie Dixon fled Stuttgart with her brother as the Nazi regime gained power in Germany. Three years later, she returns to Berlin in horror to witness Entartete Kunst, the government-sanctioned exhibition and destruction of Germany’s modern art. When her adopted home city of Paris is conquered by the Nazis, Sophie reluctantly accepts an offer to continue her work at the Jeu de Paume Museum under the supervision of the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg, a German art commission that uses the museum as a repository for art they’ve looted from Jewish families.

Fabienne Brandt was a rising star in the Parisian bohemian arts movement until the Nazis put a stop to so-called “degenerate art”. Still mourning the loss of her firebrand husband, she’s resolved to muddle her way through the occupation in whatever way she can—until her estranged sister-in-law Sophie arrives at her door with a stolen painting in hand. Realizing that Paris’s modern art might soon meet the same fate as their counterparts in Entartete Kunst, the two women embark upon a plan to save Paris’s “degenerates”, working beneath the noses of Germany’s top art connoisseurs to replace the paintings in the Jeu de Paume with skillful forgeries—but when Hermann Goering’s handpicked art dealer devises his own plan for the modern artwork in the Jeu de Paume, how long can Sophie and Fabienne sustain their masterful illusion?

Fascinating and meticulously researched, Bryn Turnbull's latest offering isn't just a story about World War II and the resistance—this book highlights the impact on the art community where it is estimated that during the Second World War, the Nazis looted some 600,000 paintings from Jews. This staggering number makes up almost 20 percent of all of the art in Europe and there are at least 100,000 of which that are still missing today. Hitler’s cleansing of modern art was not only designed to enrich the Third Reich, but also integral to the Holocaust’s goal of eliminating all traces of Jewish identity and culture. 

The Paris Deception is told told from the dual perspectives of sisters-in-law who—despite their fragile relationship—have banded together in order to save the modern masterpieces from the Nazis. Turnbull strikes the right balance between fact and fiction with her immersive and compelling writing. The attention to detail is as intricate as one of Fabienne’s forgeries.

This story about bravery, the bonds of friendship, and lost loves is a must read for any historical fiction lover. The Paris Deception sparkles like champagne—highly recommend!

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BRYN TURNBULL is an internationally bestselling author of historical fiction. Equipped with a Master of Letters in Creative Writing from the University of St. Andrews, a Master of Professional Communication from Toronto Metropolitan University, and a Bachelor's degree in English Literature from McGill University, Bryn focuses on finding stories of women lost within the cracks of the historical record. 

Her debut novel, The Woman Before Wallis, was named one of the top ten bestselling works of Canadian fiction for 2020 and became an international bestseller. Her second, The Last Grand Duchess, came out in February 2022 and spent eight weeks on the Globe & Mail and Toronto Star bestseller lists. The Paris Deception is her third novel. 


Q & A with Bryn Turnbull*

GWR: How did you start writing/become a writer? 

BT: My family would tell you that I’ve always been a writer. I honestly don’t remember a time where I wasn’t jotting down a story or character ideas in some notebook or another. I became a writer in earnest in 2015, when I came across the person who would become the subject of my first novel, Thelma Furness. At the time I was working in corporate communications, and I felt so strongly about writing that novel that I quit my job and moved to Scotland for a year to write what became The Woman Before Wallis. The rest, as they say, is history.

GWR: Are you a pantser/gardner or a plotter/architect? What does your writing process look like?

BT: I’m a plotter, for sure—the first few months of my process involves creating long, elaborate Excel spreadsheets which break the book down scene by scene in as much detail as I can muster, then going back and refining those scene breakdowns so they flow together properly. I also do lots of research for my books, diving deep into the socio-political historical and context of my chosen setting month by month and year by year so my characters can play against that context properly.

GWR: Can you tell us about the research process for The Paris Deception—what did you enjoy most about it and was there anything you discovered that surprised you? 

BT: This was such a fascinating book to research because not only was I putting my characters within a context I’d been wanting to write about for years—the impact of the Second World War on Europe’s art community—but also because I got to give my characters very specialized jobs: one is an art conservator, one is an art forger, and another is a champagne maker. Needless to say, I went down some great research rabbit holes with each of them: for my conservator character, Sophie, I was able to tour the laboratories of some incredible modern day conservators, and for Fabienne I was able to meet a real-life art forger who walked me through some of the methods they used to forge art. I was also able to travel to France to research this book, and spent days in the Jardin des Tuileries planning an art heist before heading to Reims to tour champagne houses… all in the name of research, of course!

GWR: What was the genesis of the novel? 

BT: The novel came out of a challenge set to me by my brother, who wanted me to write a book that he would like better than his favourite movie, The Thomas Crown Affair. Needless to say, it was a tall order, but the idea of writing a book about an art heist piqued my interest. I recalled the case of a forger in 1943 who sold a fake Vermeer to Hermann Goering in 1943, and the two ideas merged together in my mind: a book about an art heist, set during the Second World War. 

GWR: What comes first for you—the overall idea or the characters?   

BT: When I wrote my first two novels, the character came first, because both books were based on actual historical heroines. With this novel, the main characters are fictional so I built them around the book’s setting. I knew I needed a character with the kind of specialized skill set that would enable her to avoid being dismissed by the Germans when they take over the museum, so it felt appropriate to make Sophie an art conservator, and the idea of making her German—of making her a conscientious objector to Hitler’s regime, who feels a sense of responsibility to set things right in what way she could, felt like it would be an interesting dynamic to include in the novel. Fabienne was also born out of context: I needed a skilled artist with access to a different setting that would provide the backdrop for a compelling secondary storyline.  

GWR: How did you balance crafting a good story against historical accuracy? Did you take any creative liberties?

BT: Historical fiction tends to lie somewhere along a spectrum between complete historical accuracy and complete fiction, and where possible I like to set my novels closer to the historical record than not. With this novel, I’ve put fictional characters—and a fictional mission—in an all too real historical context: the looting of priceless collections of art from Jewish families across Nazi-occupied Europe. The museum where the action takes place—the Jeu de Paume—was indeed used by a Nazi art commission called the ERR as a storehouse for plundered artwork, and as a gallery for high-ranking Nazis like Hermann Goering to select the choicest works to send into Germany.

The history of the Room of Martyrs, and of so-called “degenerate” art in Nazi-occupied territories is also sadly accurate. Many works of modern art by artists including Van Gogh, Picasso, Dali, Cezanne, Kirchner and Klee were either destroyed by the Nazis or exchanged with dealers who sold them on to clients who either didn’t know or care that the paintings had been stolen from their rightful owners.

GWR: What made you decide to write the book from a dual point of view? Was it easier or more challenging to explore the parallel storyline?

BT: I loved writing from a dual perspective. I felt that having two main characters allowed me to open up the scope of the novel and explore different aspects of occupied France, as well as allowing me to layer in a few different emotional threads that would have been difficult to include with Sophie alone—she already had so much on her plate!

GWR: What do you hope readers will take away from The Paris Deception?

BT: When I wrote this novel I was fascinated by the notion of what resistance looked like for those who couldn’t or didn’t join the “capital-R” Resistance. With the benefit of hindsight, it seems so simple to say that if we were in occupied France we would do the right thing and stand up against tyranny, but not everyone could become a radio operator or blow up railway lines in the name of freedom. What did resistance look like on an individual level? How did people resist within their own sphere of influence?

I hope that people take away the idea that there are so many different ways to stand up for your principles, and to do the right thing—that individual resistance, small-scale resistance, can still make a meaningful difference.

GWR: Can you share what are you working on now?

BT: I’m moving a few decades forward in history (and a bit further northeast) to write about a couple that gets separated by the Berlin Wall. 

*A version of this post was published on STYLE Canada.

Saturday, June 17, 2023

The Whispers by Ashley Audrain

A special thank you to Penguin Random House Canada for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

On Harlow Street, the well-to-do neighbor­hood couples and their children gather for a barbecue as the summer winds down. Everything is fabulous until Whitney, the picture-perfect hostess, explodes in fury because her son disobeys her. Everyone at the party hears her exquisite veneer crack—loud and clear. Before long, that same young boy falls from his bedside window in the middle of the night. And then his mother can only sit by her son’s hospital bed, where his life hangs in the balance.

Over the course of a tense three days, the women of the neighborhood grapple with what led to that terrible night. People-pleasing Blair, Whitney’s best friend, suspects something isn’t as it seems. Rebecca, the ER doctor who helps treat Whit­ney’s son, has struggled to have a child of her own. And the all-knowing Mara, the older woman next door, watches everyone’s world unravel from her front porch.

Ashley Audrain's sophomore effort is a propulsive page-turner. This character-driven psychological thriller centres around a tragedy and the ripple effect it has on four separate families. The Whispers is raw and visceral—not for the faint of heart.

The novel is told from the perspectives of four women: Whitney, a career woman and mother of three; Blair, a stay-at-home mom; Rebecca, a doctor who is struggling with miscarriages; and Mara, a widow in her eighties who is still grieving the death of her only son. The Whispers is also an examination of motherhood: how trying it can be, the pressure to be the perfect mother, how awful it is to want to be a one, and how devastating it is to lose a child and not be a mother anymore. 

What I love about Audrain’s books are all the nuances that start with the title and funnel down through the thematic elements. Whispers are what we don't want others to hear, the things we say to ourselves, what we say about others, and the things that may or may not be true. She captures all of these things behind the closed doors of her characters.  

Exploring themes of envy, desire, and motherhood, The Whispers is about giving in to impulse and about the whispers that we silence. Highly recommend!

*Trigger warning: miscarriage and infertility, discussion of suicide, infidelity, accident involving child.

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ASHLEY AUDRAIN previously worked as the publicity director of Penguin Books Canada. Prior to Penguin, she worked in public relations. She is a graduate of the Media, Information & Technoculture program at Western University. The Push is her debut.

Audrain lives in Toronto, where she and her partner are raising their two young children. 


Q & A with Ashley Audrain*

GWR: Is there a particular author/work that inspired you to become a writer or the way you write? 

AA: I don’t know if there’s just one, but I’m certainly inspired by women writing page-turning stories about complex female characters, and I always have been. As a teenager, I loved to read the Oprah’s Book Club picks each month because she often focused on darker stories about women, and fiction that was very accessible. I probably read things a bit too mature for my age, but I think that curiosity is part of what makes reading so compelling for young people.

GWR: Did you approach writing The Whispers the same way as The Push? What does your writing process look like?

AA: It really felt like a very different writing process from start to finish in terms of where and when I was writing. I’d worked on The Push for a much longer time, in bigger chunks of time, and revised it at my own pace, all while having my babies—with The Whispers, I had a deadline and editors for the first time, and writing it also overlapped with the bulk of the pandemic. I found it really difficult to be productive and creative during that period, in a time crunch, with so many months of lockdown and schools closed in Toronto (I know we can all relate). I woke up every day at 5am to work through revisions until the kids woke up, and then the rest of the day was a complete write-off. That said, I’d learned a lot during the writing of The Push, including just how valuable BIG revisions are. It’s always painful to feel like you’re digging up the foundation of a book, but now I can see that’s a completely necessary part of my process. So, both books went through a lot of changes, and I didn’t have a fully developed structure for either of them before I started. I suppose that’s my writing process… make a mess and then try to clean it up! 

GWR: You have a publishing background—did this help or hinder your writing? What do you like most about the publishing process? What do you like the least?

AA: I think having a publishing background has only helped my writing, mostly because in publishing, you have to read so much and so widely, including genres you wouldn’t otherwise try and authors you hadn’t read before. Reading is such good ‘training’ for writing, especially if you’re paying keen attention to things like structure and voice and pacing. 

The thing I love most about the publishing process is that much-anticipated moment of (hopefully!) feeling like the draft is exactly where it should be—that a revision has accomplished what it needs to and is ready to send back to my (wonderful) editors. It’s such a satisfying part of the process, after a lot of hard work. The part I like least is probably the jumble of nerves and emotions just before publication, waiting to see how the novel will be received by readers and critics. There’s such little control during this time—the work is done, and all you can do is wait with fingers crossed.

GWR: What was the genesis of The Whispers?

AA: A few things were on my mind at the time I was developing The Whispers. First, I was living in Little Portugal in Toronto, and wanted to explore the feeling of that neighbourhood…the idea of young, busy families moving in, renovating old houses, and essentially taking over the street while the older Portuguese immigrants were trying to hang on to the porch culture they’d long established and enjoyed. Second, there was a bedroom window in my son’s room that didn’t have a lock (at first). He wasn’t big enough to reach the window, but I always had a terrible visual of him opening up the window in the middle of the night and falling out. This, of course, inspired a pivotal plot point in The Whispers

And then, a bit later into the draft, I came across this concept of ‘the whispers’ on an episode of Oprah’s podcast, featuring a conversation with her best friend, Gayle King. Gayle shares about ‘the whispers’ she had long quieted about her marriage, until she couldn’t anymore—because she came home and found her husband with another woman. I loved this idea of the ways our life is always speaking to us, whether or not we want to hear it, and how complex this can be for women who are terrified of the consequences if they listen. 

GWR: Did any minor characters become major characters over the course of the novel?

AA: I think Mara grew the most as a character over the course of revisions—I loved her story from the beginning, but at one point she was more of grumpy voyeur, less involved in the plot. I love where she ended up, and I really enjoyed writing from her perspective.

GWR: What do you enjoy more: character development or plot?

AA: I think I enjoy thinking about character most, but I also find it the hardest to work through on the page. Often, I think I’ve conveyed something about a character in the story, but it’s really living more in my mind—this has been a consistent theme in my early reader feedback! I think it’s because I feel like I know these characters so well; as writers we often live with them long before they make it on the page. It’s sometimes hard to see what we haven’t communicated about them yet. 

GWR: You tackle some weightier subjects—miscarriage, infertility, infidelity, trauma—which topics do you wish more authors would write about?

AA: Definitely pregnancy loss, although I can understand why authors might choose not to. It’s a very personal and terrifying experience to go through. Although I can think of many characters who have had miscarriages, we don’t often see the physicality of it in real time on the page. When I had my miscarriages, it was striking to me how foreign the entire experience was—I knew nothing about what would really happen, how it would feel, how to deal with the aftermath. I think if we shared more about this on the page or on the screen, it might feel a bit less lonely for women who go through it.

GWR: I love how purposeful and layered the titles are of your novels—there are several connotations of “the whispers” which I won’t say to keep spoiler-free—do you select the titles or are you even conscious of the nuances the time of writing?  

AA: Thank you. I’ve always chosen the titles after the books were finished. The Push came to me at a completely random time, when I wasn’t meaning to be brainstorm title ideas (thank you, creative fairies!). The Whispers was a title suggested by a friend of mine who had read a very early draft; this was taken straight from a phrase in Blair’s inner dialogue, but as you’ve said, it certainly applies on several levels in the novel, and became a thread throughout as I was revising.

GWR: What are you working on now?

AA: I am starting to work on something new, but unfortunately can’t say anything about it yet! But it’s been a total joy to be in a new story, with a cast of new characters. 

*A version of this post was published on STYLE Canada.

A Death at the Party by Amy Stuart

A special thank you to the publishers, Simon & Schuster Canada, for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Nadine Walsh’s summer garden party is in full swing. The neighbours all have cocktails, the catered food is exquisite—everything’s going according to plan.

But Nadine—devoted wife, loving mother, and doting daughter—finds herself standing over a dead body in her basement while her guests clink glasses upstairs. What happened? How did it come to this?

Rewind to that morning, when Nadine is in her kitchen, making last-minute preparations before she welcomes more than a hundred guests to her home to celebrate her mother’s birthday. But her husband is of little help to her, her two grown children are consumed with their own concerns, and her mother—only her mother knows that today isn’t just a birthday party. It marks another anniversary as well.

Still, Nadine will focus just on tonight. Everyone deserves a celebration after the year they’ve had. A chance for fun. A chance to forget. But it’s hard to forget when Nadine’s head is swirling with secrets, haunting memories, and concerns about what might happen when her guests unite.

Stuart's first standalone novel is a modern twist on Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway. Taking place over a single day, A Death at the Party is a tense and clever domestic thriller. She turns the classic whodunit on its head—we know who the murderer is—but we don't know which partygoer ends up dead, or why.

Nadine is a complex character—a perfectionist who is brilliantly imperfect. She may look together and polished on the outside, but is struggling with memories that threaten to crack her perfect exterior. It is easy to assume that Nadine is an unreliable narrator, especially because she is taking medication that can cloud her judgement, but there is an insidiousness dark side to her.  

With its instant hook and short, punchy chapters, A Death at the Party is perfectly executed. It is a taut and riveting thriller that's chock full of secrets. A must read!

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AMY STUART is the author of the Still series: Still Mine, Still Water, and Still Here, which have been optioned for television by Lark/NBC Universal. 

She has a MFA in Creative Writing through the University of British Columbia and worked for many years as a high school educator with the bulk of her career spent teaching guidance and English. Amy's other love is ice hockey—she is one of only four women head coaches in the GTHL, the world’s largest youth competitive hockey league. 

Stuart resides in Toronto with her husband and their three sons. They also spend much of their time on Prince Edward Island, where Amy’s family is originally from. 


Q & A with Amy Stuart*

GWR: Was there a particular author/work that inspired you to become a writer or the way that you write? 

AS: Early in my writing career I was always reading Alice Munro short stories, and I think she really taught me what attention to craft could do. Once I settled in to becoming a thriller writer, I turned to writers like Dennis Lehane, PD James, and Louise Erdrich, who are masters of plotting and the crumb dropping required in thrillers.

GWR: What is the best advice you have received as an author?

AS: Without a doubt, the best advice I’ve received is to focus as much as possible on the act of writing and not worry too much about other things you can’t control, like the publishing industry or the market or whether the book will be a bestseller or not. Whether you’re an aspiring writer or a long-published one, the fact remains that writing is the only part of the process that you solely control. It’s where all your power lies. So put most of your energy there! And in terms of the industry stuff, be a good student: Listen to the people who know what they’re talking about (agents, editors, publicists, etc) and learn from their wisdom.

GWR: A Death at the Party is your first standalone book, did your process differ from the way you approached the 'Still’ series?

AS: The process was definitely more confined, in the sense that I had to contain the entire story in one novel. I tried to lean into that sense of confinement instead of resisting it. I set the novel on a single day, limited the cast of characters and stuck to a handful of settings. Having less room to maneuver forced me to learn some new tricks as a writer. It was actually quite fun!

GWR: How did you come up with the concept—what sparked the idea?

AS: Years ago, I read Mrs. Dalloway, the 1925 classic novel by Virginia Woolf. It follows a woman—Clarissa Dalloway—over the course of a single day as she prepares for a party. Sound familiar? The premise of A Death at the Party is exactly the same, but with a dead body in the mix. I’ve always thought it would be great fun to take the structure of a classic novel and twist it into a thriller. So that’s what I did. 

GWR: Overall, what do you have more fun with, character development or plot?

AS: Yikes! I would say characters are more fun for me. Plotting is like a complex puzzle…when it’s working it’s wonderful, and when it’s not, it’s deeply frustrating. Characters are a little more pliable and forgiving, at least in the early stages of the process. I love layering in the quirks and characteristics that make them each their own person. 

GWR: What is the one element of a thriller that is a must?

AS: To me, the key element to a thriller is the question. In the case of A Death at the Party, the question isn’t “whodunit?” but instead “whydunit?” We know from the first pages who commits the murder, so the question becomes why she did (and also, who is dead). As thriller readers, we’re propelled forward because there’s a central question—or questions—we simply need answered. That’s what keeps us turning the pages.

GWR: Do your plot twists happen organically, or do you construct your books around them?

AS: That’s a tough question! I think it’s a combination of both. In A Death at the Party, a few of the major plot twists actually did come about organically; certain events made sense as I got to know the characters better. But I need the central twist to be known before I get too deep in the writing process, or else I’m apt to veer way off course.

GWR: Give your best Hollywood pitch for A Death at the Party and who would you cast?

AS: Hollywood pitch: Imagine a gorgeous party full of gorgeous people. A band playing, everyone dressed to the nines, drinks flowing. The speeches have just ended, with secrets revealed! All is perfect. Aside, of course, from the dead body in the basement. 

In terms of casting, I’ve always thought that Charlize Theron would make the perfect Nadine, and Michelle Pfeiffer, her mother Marilyn, because they’re only 20 years apart in age. From there, I’d give the Hollywood directors full liberties in choosing their cast. 

GWR: If your book was a beverage, what would it be? 

AS: A deliciously sweet cocktail with a hint of red in the colour and a flower for the garnish. 

GWR: What are you working on now?

AS: A lot of things! A screenplay, and a new novel. Too early for the Hollywood pitch, but I’m excited for it!

*A version of this post was published on STYLE Canada.