The Secret Photograph Audiobook By Siobhan Curham cover art

The Secret Photograph

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The Secret Photograph

By: Siobhan Curham
Narrated by: Amelia Sciandra
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About this listen

Nazi-occupied Paris, 1942. Clarisse clutches her camera as hundreds of police swarm the streets. Through her lens, she spots a terrified brown-eyed little girl being carried screaming into a truck, her yellow star hanging crooked from her threadbare coat. Clarisse rushes forward to help, but the truck pulls away....

With a fake name written on the papers in her pocket, American photographer Clarisse Alarie knows the dangers of Paris better than most. Haunted by the sight of children being dragged away and carrying a photograph of the brown-eyed little girl everywhere she goes, Clarisse is desperate to make a difference. Meeting handsome resistance fighter Louis is her chance.

Louis introduces Clarisse to Café Capoulade and his underground network of brave men and women fighting tirelessly to end the occupation. Soon, Clarisse is risking her life every day. Taking photographs of the terror that has overcome the beautiful city, Clarisse follows members of the Gestapo and hides in plain sight in order to gather evidence of their terrible crimes.

But Clarisse soon learns of the overcrowded cattle cars leaving Paris, carrying even the smallest children, bound for an unspeakably terrible place. Is she already too late to rescue the little girl with the brown eyes? And when Louis himself is arrested, will Clarisse risk everything the network has worked so hard for to save them both?

Set around true historical events that shook the world, The Secret Photograph is a sweeping and utterly gripping wartime tale of courage and resilience in the face of unimaginable terror. Fans of The Alice Network, The Nightingale, and Soraya M. Lane will be totally hooked.

©2023 Siobhan Curham (P)2023 Bookouture, an imprint of Storyfire Ltd.
20th Century Fiction Genre Fiction Historical Fiction War & Military Transportation Inspiring France Military

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very well written

I've read several books about the resistance but have only given 5 starts once before. it was an enjoyable read and I recommend it highly

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Gripping! Sincerely one of the best and I’ve read many!

I’m not generally interested in two timelines but this one was done so unobtrusively- and to my embarrassment, I didn’t realize who the “I” in the 1984 timeline was until quite a ways into the book. For a bit there I thought all the loss was just too much and the book wouldn’t have a happy ending, but it did. I feel like this book, more than almost any other, carried me into the actual terror and emotion of the war, and the devastation of the not only the Jews, but the Resistance when they were caught, and even the lives of those allowed to remain in Paris. The small acts of resistance, by simply folding your train ticket into a V, wearing bright colors, whatever the Parisians could think of to resist in even the smallest way even if not part of the actual Resistance. I’d say this is one of the best books I’ve read in that regard, pulling me in emotionally, and I’ve read some fabulous WW2/Resistance /War against Nazi Germany Novels! Thanks to you writers who keep it alive and remind us that we are not incapable of hatred and allowing terrible wars to happen again if we do not learn. And that the reciprocating hatred of some of the French towards collaborators only bred more hate, not healing…

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