Now she is in her late 50s, with a broken marriage behind her, has worked in the same job for years, her parents are aging and unwell, and she is involved in a relationship that is going nowhere. She had planned to travel to Paris with her friend, but when she dies from cancer, Nicole is determined to honour the deathbed promise that she made. " Be wild. Dance in the streets, take French lessons. Walk the wrong way home. Don't play it safe."
What she never expected was that this trip to Paris would end up leading to a search for her past. At first Nicole just enjoyed wandering the streets of the city that she has always loved from afar, but gradually she begins to connect with the people around her. One of those people is an antiques dealer and one day while she is in his shop a consignment comes in, and Nicole helps going through the boxes. Amongst the contents are a lot of jazz records and a book that contains a picture of someone very familiar - her father. How did a photo of her father end up hidden in a box in Paris? A phone call home leads to more questions than answers and the search is on for the truth. With the help of some new found friends, Nicole searches the past with surprising revelations that both change just about everything she knows about her family, but also reinforces the relationships that she had with them.
Interspersed within Nicole's chapters, we are taken back to the years immediately after World War II and we meet Ruby Mae Garrett, an impetuous 16 year old who also yearns for Paris. She meets a musician who she runs away with and finds herself working in lots of bars and music halls working towards their dream - Paris! Arnett is a saxophonist and he believes that if he can make it to Paris he can make it big, and all their problems will resolved. Most of all though, the dream is to live in a place where the colour of your skin doesn't matter, where there are no Jim Crow laws that mean you can never look a white person in the face, that you can only go to certain stores and restaurants, and can only ever enter through the doors marked 'Coloured'. The post war Paris might be difficult for other nationalities but for African Americans who come to stay after the war, it is a kind of nirvana.
Another reason for Arnett and Ruby Mae to make it work in Paris - the city is alive to the sound of jazz! Whilst I have read a lot of other books set in Paris, usually the focus is the experience of just being there or the food. This time it is the experience, but it is also the history of black jazz musicians who flocked to the city, and that history was quite fascinating!
Whilst the two story lines were interesting, as a whole book this didn't totally work for me. I liked Nicole and I really appreciated the fact that she was a mature woman who had made mistakes, who had lived, and who was ready to follow her dreams. Ruby Mae was harder for me to like. She definitely went after her dreams, but it was a single minded determination, at the expense of many people around her. There were quite a few times when I found myself thinking that the plot was travelling a familiar path and I knew where the story was going, but then there were other times when I was genuinely surprised at the turns in the plot.
I really liked that at the beginning of each of the contemporary chapters the author included a few French phrases that then connected with the events that occurred in the story. It is clear that the author loves Paris as a place. That loves shines through the descriptions of the places that she takes the reader, some of which are the familiar places to tourists and others a little more off the beaten track. I am planning to share an excerpt later in the week.
When this blog tour was first announced, it was long before it had been confirmed that Paris In July was going to be on again this year, but I still volunteered for the tour in the hopes that the event would be running. Regardless, this book fed my own hunger to be in Paris, so that's good, right? Kind of.
Rating 3.5/5
Synopsis
Nicole-Marie Handy has loved all things French since she was a child. After the death of her best friend, determined to get out of her rut, she goes to Paris, leaving behind a marriage proposal. While there, Nicole chances upon an old photo of her father-lovingly inscribed, in his hand, to a woman Nicole has never heard of. What starts as a vacation quickly becomes an investigation into his relationship to this mystery woman.
Moving back and forth in time between the sparkling Paris of today and the jazz-fueled city filled with expatriates in the 1950s, Passing Love is the story of two women dealing with lost love, secrets, and betrayal...and how the City of Light may hold all of the answers.
Tour Details:
Tour Schedule
Jacqueline E Luckett's Website
Thanks to the author and TLC Book Tours for sending me a copy of this book for review.
Very interesting premise, Paris really is a wonderful backdrop for a story. Makes me want to go back there as well!!
ReplyDeleteI would be happy to go back anyday!
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ReplyDeleteGreat review. I am adding this book to my wish list!
ReplyDeleteThanks Julie!
DeleteI am not sure if this one would work for me, based on some of the reservations you had, but it does sound thrilling, so I am torn. I haven't read much about Paris, though I do have a few books here that I could pick up. I am intrigued by the plot involving the photograph and the family secrets. I might see if the library has this one on audio...
ReplyDeleteThanks for the outstanding review today, Marg!
It was definitely interesting from a historical perspective Heather.
DeleteThe two timelines in this sound quite interesting--I'd imagine that Paris would be much changed between the two stories. Thanks for this thoughtful review.
ReplyDeleteYes and no.
DeleteOne of the big differences is in the attitudes to racism.
I find that I will forgive weaker stories for a Paris setting.
ReplyDeleteThanks for being a part of the tour Marg!
ReplyDeleteThanks for having me Heather!
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