My thoughts
This book will definitely be in my top ten book of the year. It was perfection. A story that kept me turning the pages. Kept me in tears and even a laugh or two. Mostly it made me believe in life. As hard as things are now and were back then, there is always hope for the future. Never give up...
This is the story of a family. Or a mother and her daughter. Colette is so young when her mother, Annabel, starts teaching her about the family "tradition." They are descendants of Robin Hood. We have all heard of him right? They steal from the rich. The ones that do harm and have little regard for others, and use it to help the underprivileged. The ones who need it most. In this case it's the underground helping the Jews to escape the Germans.
This story is told in two timelines. Back in the early/mid 1930s/1940s, and then in 2018. Told before and during the time Colette's mother is captured by the Germans for stealing. When Colette's little sister is taken by someone and murdered. When she herself and her father are also arrested. The guilt that follows Colette. She blames herself for Liiane's abduction and subsequent death.
This is also a story of much hope. Of a love story that was never allowed to blossom. Colette met a boy named Tristan when she was only fourteen and it seems they fell in love. What an innocent age. Tristan was a Jewish boy though. When the Nazi's came and put the Jews in prisons and shipped them off to concentration camps, Tristan was one of them. Colette lost him. She dedicated her life to helping the weak and finding the man who took her sister.
This book is so emotional and so good. It's about a family and shows that blood is not always what makes a family. Sometimes it's being there for others. Though blood family is very much at the center of this story too. Colette was a strong woman. She never gave up trying to find the man who took Liliane. It all starts with a bracelet. The exacte twin to the one Colette has. Whoever own it had to be the one who took Liliane.
This book is one of the best I have read. This author can write a story that always pulls you in and captures your heart. Her research is impeccable. She puts her whole heart in each story she writes.
Please read the AUTHOR'S NOTE at the ending too. It's well worth it. I'm so glad Kristin Harmel got her writing abilities back. So very glad.
Don't forget to get those mammograms ladies. They can be lifesaving. May 21st was mine. Please get them every year!!
Thank you to #NetGalley, and #GalleryBooks, for this ARC.
About
Kristin Harmel, the New York Timesbestselling author who “is the best there is at sweeping historical drama” (Kelly Harms, author ofThe Seven Day Switch), returns with an electrifying new novel about two jewel thieves, a priceless bracelet that disappears in 1940s Paris, and a quest for answers in a decades-old murder.
Colette Marceau has been stealing jewels for nearly as long as she can remember, following the centuries-old code of honor instilled in her by her mother, take only from the cruel and unkind, and give to those in need. Never was their family tradition more important than seven decades earlier, during the Second World War, when Annabel and Colette worked side by side in Paris to fund the French Resistance.
But one night in 1942, it all went wrong. Annabel was arrested by the Germans, and Colette’s four-year-old sister, Liliane, disappeared in the chaos of the raid, along with an exquisite diamond bracelet sewn into the hem of her nightgown for safekeeping. Soon after, Annabel was executed, and Liliane’s body was found floating in the Seine—but the bracelet was nowhere to be found.
Seventy years later, Colette—who has “redistributed” $30 million in jewels over the decades to fund many worthy organizations—has done her best to put her tragic past behind her, but her life begins to unravel when the long-missing bracelet suddenly turns up in a museum exhibit in Boston. If Colette can discover where it has been all this time—and who owns it now—she may finally learn the truth about what happened to her sister. But she isn’t the only one for whom the bracelet holds answers, and when someone from her childhood lays claim to the diamonds, she’s forced to confront the ghosts of her past as never before. Against all odds, there may still be a chance to bring a murderer to justice—but first, Colette will have to summon the courage to open her own battered heart.
Colette Marceau has been stealing jewels for nearly as long as she can remember, following the centuries-old code of honor instilled in her by her mother, take only from the cruel and unkind, and give to those in need. Never was their family tradition more important than seven decades earlier, during the Second World War, when Annabel and Colette worked side by side in Paris to fund the French Resistance.
But one night in 1942, it all went wrong. Annabel was arrested by the Germans, and Colette’s four-year-old sister, Liliane, disappeared in the chaos of the raid, along with an exquisite diamond bracelet sewn into the hem of her nightgown for safekeeping. Soon after, Annabel was executed, and Liliane’s body was found floating in the Seine—but the bracelet was nowhere to be found.
Seventy years later, Colette—who has “redistributed” $30 million in jewels over the decades to fund many worthy organizations—has done her best to put her tragic past behind her, but her life begins to unravel when the long-missing bracelet suddenly turns up in a museum exhibit in Boston. If Colette can discover where it has been all this time—and who owns it now—she may finally learn the truth about what happened to her sister. But she isn’t the only one for whom the bracelet holds answers, and when someone from her childhood lays claim to the diamonds, she’s forced to confront the ghosts of her past as never before. Against all odds, there may still be a chance to bring a murderer to justice—but first, Colette will have to summon the courage to open her own battered heart.
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