Last Twilight In Paris
By Pam
Jenoff
On Sale: February
4, 2025
ISBN:
9780778307983
Park Row Hardcover
Price: $28.99
Buy Links:
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About the Book:
"A fast-paced and vibrant wartime
tale of holding on to love against the odds and learning to fight for the
truth." –Kristin Harmel, New
York Times bestselling author of The Paris Daughter
A Parisian department store, a mysterious necklace and a woman’s quest to
unlock a decade-old mystery are at the center of this riveting novel of love
and survival, from New York Times bestselling author Pam Jenoff
London, 1953. Louise is still adjusting to her postwar role as a
housewife when she discovers a necklace in a box at a secondhand shop. The box
is marked with the name of a department store in Paris, and she is certain she
has seen the necklace before worked with the Red Cross in Nazi-occupied Europe
—and that it holds the key to the mysterious death of her friend Franny during
the war.
Following the trail of clues to Paris, Louise seeks help from her former boss
Ian, with whom she shares a romantic history. The necklace leads
them to discover the dark history of Lévitan—a once-glamorous department store that
served as a Nazi prison, and Helaine, a woman who was imprisoned there, torn
apart from her husband when the Germans invaded France.
Louise races to find the connection between the necklace, the department store
and Franny’s death. But nothing is as it seems, and there are forces determined
to keep the truth buried forever. Inspired by the true story of
Lévitan, Last Twilight in Paris is both a gripping mystery and
an unforgettable story about sacrifice, resistance and the power of love
to transcend in even the darkest hours.
About the Author:
Pam Jenoff is the author of several books of historical fiction, including the NYT bestseller The Orphan's Tale. She holds a degree in international affairs from George Washington University and a degree in history from Cambridge, and she received her JD from UPenn. Her novels are inspired by her experiences working at the Pentagon and as a diplomat for the State Department handling Holocaust issues in Poland. She lives with her husband and 3 children near Philadelphia, where she teaches law.
Prologue
Helaine
Paris,
1943
Darkness.
Helaine stumbled
forward, unable to see through the black void that surrounded her. She could
feel the shoulders of the others jostling on either side. The smell of unwashed
bodies rose, mingling with Helaine’s own. Her hand brushed against a rough
wall, scraping her knuckles. Someone ahead tripped and yelped.
Hours earlier,
when Helaine had been brought from her underground cell at the police station
into the adjacent holding area, she was surprised to see other women waiting.
She had not encountered anyone since her arrest. She had studied the women, who
looked to be from all walks of life, trying to discern some commonality among
their varied ages and classes that had caused them to be here. There was only
one: they were Jews. The yellow star they wore, whether soiled and crudely sewn
onto a worn, secondhand dress or pressed crisply against the latest Parisian
finery, was identical—and it made them all the same.
They had stood
in the bare holding area, not daring to speak. Helaine was certain that her
arrest had been some sort of mis take. She had done nothing wrong. They had to
free her. But even as she thought this, she knew that the old world of being a
French citizen with rights was long gone.
An hour passed,
then two. There was nowhere to sit, and a few people dropped to the floor. An
elderly woman dozed against the wall, mouth agape. But for the slight rise and
fall of her chest, she might have been dead. Hunger gnawed at Helaine and she
wished that she still had the baked goods she purchased at the market just
before she was taken. The meager breads, which had seemed so pathetic days
earlier, now would have been a feast. But her belongings had been confiscated
at arrest.
Helaine looked
upward through the thin slit of window near the ceiling. They were still in
Paris. The sour smell from the city street and the sounds of cars and footsteps
despite the curfew were familiar, if not comforting. How long they would stay
here, she did not know. Helaine was torn. She did not want to remain in this
empty room forever. Yet she also dreaded leaving, for wherever they were going
would surely be worse.
Finally, the
door had opened. “Sortir!” a voice ordered them out in native French, reminding
Helaine that the policemen, who had brought them here and who were keeping them
captive, were not Germans, but their own people.
Helaine had
filed into the dimly lit corridor with the others. They exited the police
station and stepped outside onto the pavement. At the sight of the familiar
buildings and the street leading away from the station, Helaine momentarily
considered fleeing. She had no idea, though, where she would go. She imagined
running to her childhood home, debated whether her estranged mother would take
her in or turn her away. But the women were heavily guarded and there was no
real possibility of escape. Instead, Helaine breathed the fresh air in great
gulps, sensing that she might not be in the open again for quite some time.
The women were
herded up a ramp toward an awaiting truck. Helaine recoiled. They were being
placed in the back part of the vehicle where goods should have been carried,
not people. Helaine wanted to protest but did not dare. Smells of stale grain
and rotting meat, the truck’s previous cargo, assaulted her nose, mixing with
her own stench in the warm air. It had been three days since she had bathed or
changed and her dress was wrinkled and filthy, her once-luminous black curls
dull and matted against her head.
When the women
were all inside the truck, the back hatch shut with an ominous click. “Where
are they taking us?” someone whispered. Silence. No one knew and they were all
too afraid to venture a guess. They had heard the stories of the trains headed
east to awful places from which no one ever returned. Helaine wondered how long
the journey would be.
As they bumped
along the Paris streets, Helaine’s bones, already sore from sleeping on the
hard prison cell floor, cried out in pain. Her mouth was dry and her stomach
empty. She wanted water and a meal, a hot bath. She wanted home.
If home was a
place that even existed anymore. Helaine’s husband, Gabriel, was missing in
Germany, his fate unknown. She had scarcely spoken with her parents since
before the war. And Helaine herself had been taken without notice. Nobody knew
that she had been arrested or had any idea where she had gone. It was as if she
simply no longer existed.
To distract
herself, Helaine tried to picture the route they were taking outside the
windowless truck, down the boulevards she had just days earlier walked freely,
past the cafés and shops. The familiar locations should have been some small
comfort. But this might well be the last time she ever came this way, Helaine
realized, and the thought only worsened her despair.
Several minutes
later, the truck stopped with a screech. They were at a train station, Helaine
guessed. The back hatch to the truck opened and the women peered out into pitch
blackness. “Raus!” a voice commanded. That they were under the watch of Germans
now seemed to confirm Helaine’s worst fears about where they were headed.
“Schnell!” Someone let out a cry, a mix of the anguish and uncertainty they all
felt.
The women
clambered from the truck and Helaine stumbled, banging her knee and yelping.
“Quiet,” a woman’s voice beside her cautioned fearfully. A hand reached out and
helped her down the ramp with an unexpectedly gentle touch.
Outside the
truck it was the tiniest bit lighter, and Helaine was just able to make out
some sort of loading dock. The group moved forward into a large building.
Now Helaine
found herself in complete darkness once more. This was how she had come to be
in an unfamiliar building, shuffling forward blindly with a group of women she
did not know, uncertain of where they were going or the fate that might befall
them. She could see nothing, only feel the fear and confusion in the air around
her. They seemed to be in some sort of corridor, pressed even more closely
together than they had been. Helaine put her hand on the shoulder of the woman
in front of her, trying hard not to fall again.
They were herded
roughly through a doorway, into a room that was also unlit. No one moved or
spoke. Helaine had heard rumors of mass executions, groups of people gassed or
simply shot. The Germans might do that to them now. Her skin prickled. She
thought of those she loved most, Gabriel and, despite everything that had
happened, her parents. Helaine wanted their faces, not fear, to be her final
thought.
Bright lights
turned on suddenly, illuminating the space around them. “Mon Dieu!” someone
behind her exclaimed softly. Helaine blinked her eyes, scarcely daring to
believe what she saw. They were not in a camp or a prison at all. Instead, they
were standing in the main showroom of what had once been one of the grandest
department stores in Paris.
Excerpted
from LAST TWILIGHT IN PARIS by Pam Jenoff. Copyright © 2025 by Pam Jenoff.
Published by Park Row Books, an imprint of HTP/HarperCollins.
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