Paris '44
The Shame and the Glory
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Narrated by:
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Peter Noble
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By:
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Patrick Bishop
About this listen
Brought to you by Penguin.
From the Sunday Times-bestselling author, comes a heart-stopping countdown narrative recreating the liberation of Paris in 1944, one of the great and most dramatic hinge moments of WW2
When the Germans marched in and the lamps went out in the City of Light the millions who loved Paris mourned. Liberation, four years later, triggered an explosion of joy and relief. It was the party of the century and everybody who was anybody was there. General Charles de Gaulle seized the moment to create an instant legend that would take its place alongside the great moments in French history. After years of oppression and humiliation Parisians had risen to reclaim their city and drive out the forces of darkness – or so the story went.
This fresh new account of the liberation, packed with revelation, tells the story of those heady days of suspense, danger, exhilaration – and vengeance – through the eyes of a range of participants, reflecting all sides of the conflict: Americans, French and Germans; resisters and collaborators. Among them are famous names like Ernest Hemingway, J.D. Salinger and Pablo Picasso, but also some fascinating unknowns including a medic turned Resistance gunwoman, an androgynous Hungarian sculptor and a French bluestocking who quietly set about saving the nation’s art treasures from the Nazi looters.
Paris ’44 looks behind the mythology to tell the real story of the liberation and expose the conflicts and contradictions of France under the occupation – the shame as well as the glory. This gripping war-time narrative will enthral anyone who has a place for Paris in their hearts.
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What listeners say about Paris '44
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- Amazon Customer
- 15-08-24
Loved it
Did not expect to enjoy it as much as I did. Really has a great flow through the years of history
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- G.A. Davies
- 11-11-24
Paris 1944
The book gives an excellent insight in the liberation of Paris in a very easy listening way.
The narration and narrator is probably the best l've experienced.
Great listening.
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- Mrs. Shirley Gould-smith
- 29-08-24
British Parisienne
Born in Paris in 1935 , the author is filling gaps of history for me. So many names i know and much of the story is known to me. I am enjoying the book very much BUT I do wish the reader, who is doing fairly well with his own interpretation of French words, could do a better job with names ending with a 'C'. General Leclerc is pronounced as Lecler ..... no 'c' should ever be heard as a 'q' as he does. When are the British going to remember that the word 'blanc' is pronounced 'blan' and not 'blank'; It is a real turn off.
We were evacuated during the war but the first place I was made to visit on my return to Puteaux, my home, was to visit The Mont Valerien ???/ Horrendous but never to be forgotten,
I am enjoying the book but do feel that the world I entered in 1935 seems to be in a delicate state now ,,, going I know not where once again as I am about to leave it. Not comfortable at all as I think of my children and grandchildren .... Fascism is not far away once more as new Hitlers head many a country ......
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