Suite Francaise

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Suite Francaise

by Irene Nemirovsky
2416 members / 0 friends / 32 groups / 177 reviews / 117 tags
Beginning in Paris on the eve of the Nazi occupation in 1940. Suite Française tells the remarkable story of men and women thrown together in circumstances beyond their control. As Parisians flee the city, human folly surfaces in every imaginable way: a wealthy mother searches for sweets in a town without food; a couple is terrified at the thought of losing their jobs, even as their world begins to fall apart. Moving on to a provincial village now occupied by German soldiers, the locals must learn to coexist with the enemy—in their town, their homes, even in their hearts.

When Irène Némirovsky began working on Suite Française, she was already a highly successful writer living in Paris. But she was also a Jew, and in 1942 she was arrested and deported to Auschwitz, where she died. For sixty-four years, this novel remained hidden and unknown.

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  • Rated 3.8784 stars

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  • Rated 4.5 stars

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  • Dana

    dana says

    Nemirovsky did a good job in portraying the intensity of the situation (i.e. the flight, hunger, war, etc.). Unfortunately, it is unfinished due to the author's capture and eventual death. I liked the ending of the first part and how it jumped from each character to give a synopsis of where they left off and a glimpse of how they will survive the occupation.

    posted 13 days ago

    (read dana’ review)

  • Lucy's Grandma

    lucy's grandma says

    This novel is a memoir by a Russian Jew who was in France during the German occupation. It's an amazing novel given the circumstances under which it was written and the author's youth. She meant it to be part of a suite of five movements (comparable to a symphony), but was unable to finish the final movements because she became a victim of the Nazis.

    posted 2 weeks ago

    (read lucy's grandma’ review)

  • Tamia  B

    tamia b says

    I agree, r u, that this story could have been more polished. I think that's part of the tragedy of this story...it has so much potential which will never be realized because of the senseless death of its author. That's the real story here.

    I agree with you also about the anti-climactic ending, but one of the elements of a good story is its "arc"--every good story begins with an event that sets up a conflict that must be resolved and therefore ends when that conflict is resolved, in this case the coming and going of the Germans. The book is a look at how the people attempt to resolve that conflict--how they deal with the German Occupation--but in the end it's not the French who cause the Germans to go away. That's why the ending feels so dissatisfying.

    posted 3 weeks ago

    (This is a response to a previous comment)

    (tamia b previously rated this book 3 stars, read review)

  • R U

    r u says

    I liked the writing style, and there was a lot of close observation here, however, I found the beginning quite disjointed and the ending dropped off in an anti-climactic way. I realize that this was not intended to be the end of the story, but after everything the characters went through it was odd to just have the German soldiers march off into the sunset.

    posted 3 weeks ago

    (read r u’ review)

  • Karli K

    karli k says

    I loved this book. The tragedy of the author's death in Auschwitz is all too felt by the reader as two of the four parts were never finished. A book about the French during the exodus and occupation. A little humor. A must-read.

    posted Thursday, May 22 2008

  • Barry K

    barry k says

    I totally agree Christi, the appendix was as powerful if not more so than the book. And you nailed it when you said "the world missed out on a treasure".
    Barry k

    posted Saturday, March 1 2008

    (This is a response to a previous comment)

    (barry k previously rated this book 5 stars, read review)

  • Lydia G

    lydia g says

    This is my current favorite novel - I.N. does such a good job of describing French manners. It is so subtle, the writing so detailed, precise and delicate.

    posted Friday, February 1 2008

  • martinhughharvey

    martinhughharvey says

    I can't comment on Russian literature as apart fro a few Solzhenitsyn (reminds me - must add!) but one reaction I had to SF was I really enjoyed the English throughout the book.

    posted Thursday, November 15 2007

    (This is a response to a previous comment)

    (martinhughharvey previously rated this book 4 stars)

  • Marjorie L

    marjorie l says

    an intriguing story, a backdrop of world war II--i found it to be unique in style and presentation,,i didnt want the book to end, and when it did I was left hanging with a real appetite for more information on the characters. The author died in auschwitz, but her words remain alive.

    posted Thursday, November 15 2007

  • Lee Tulloch

    lee tulloch says

    Poignant reminder that authors do not exist in a vaccuum. Nemirovsky was hauled off to a concentration camp before she had the opportunity to finish this.

    posted Monday, November 5 2007

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