‘I had a dream last night that we were in Paris for Christmas. You, me, Will, Alice…..It was the most perfect dream Thomas. I know we will get there one day. I promise we will’
Last Christmas in Paris is a collaborative work of fiction from two bestselling authors, Hazel Gaynor and Heather Webb. Just published by Harper Collins/William Morrow, Last Christmas in Paris is a novel based, mainly, on the correspondence between Evie Elliot and Thomas Harding during the Great War.
I have never read a book in this format before but what an incredible book this was!! I’m feeling very fortunate recently to be reading books that have burrowed straight into my heart. Last Christmas in Paris is one such book.
Please continue reading to find out why….
Book Info:
August 1914. England is at war. As Evie Elliott watches her brother, Will, and his best friend, Thomas Harding, depart for the front, she believes—as everyone does—that it will be over by Christmas, when the trio plan to celebrate the holiday among the romantic cafes of Paris.
But as history tells us, it all happened so differently…
Evie and Thomas experience a very different war. Frustrated by life as a privileged young lady, Evie longs to play a greater part in the conflict—but how?—and as Thomas struggles with the unimaginable realities of war he also faces personal battles back home where War Office regulations on press reporting cause trouble at his father’s newspaper business. Through their letters, Evie and Thomas share their greatest hopes and fears—and grow ever fonder from afar. Can love flourish amid the horror of the First World War, or will fate intervene?
Christmas 1968. With failing health, Thomas returns to Paris—a cherished packet of letters in hand—determined to lay to rest the ghosts of his past. But one final letter is waiting for him…
Review:
Last Christmas in Paris is a novel consisting of letters written over the course of WW1, coupled with intermittent flashbacks from an elderly man in 1968 as he embarks on one final journey. Divided into five main sections, one for each year of the war, we watch the blossoming of relationships, the tragedy of useless deaths and the horrors of war as they unfold.
One of my all time favourite books is Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks, a book that truly brought the atrocities of the Great War home to me. Last Christmas in Paris exposes the barbarity of this ‘war to end all wars’ using a different method and in doing so stirs up similar strong emotions.
The year is 1914. It is expected that England will be involved in a short skirmish, with all troops safely home for Christmas. Evie Elliot waves off her brother Will and his best friend Thomas Harding, with a promise that the three of them will gather on the banks of the Seine to celebrate the joys of the Festive season. Evie loves to write, with dreams of being published some day, but for now she is happy to write letters to Will and Thomas as they embark on their journey into the unknown.
Initially the letters contain lighthearted banter as all three are carried along in all the excitement of the adventure, but as we now know, the battlefields of France soon became a nightmare.
In the prologue of the novel, it is 1968 and a much older and fragile Tomas Harding is packing his bags, with one last letter in his hand that he will only open in Paris. He carries with him all the correspondence that was written during those years of war, between Evie and himself. ‘So much fear and hope captured in our words, so much longing and loss – and love. She always said her war was fought in words; her pen and prose the only weapon she, as a woman, could wield….That a fragile bundle of paper sentiments survived the war when so many people were lost has always angered me, but now I am glad of them’
Thomas shares the words, the feelings, the inhumanity of those years, through these letters with us. We are taken on a journey back through the annals of time, back to when the innocence of so many was ravaged and hope for so many more was forever lost.
At the beginning Evie is quite flighty and coy in her letters. Overtime there is an underlying flirtatiousness to her writing, which is soon followed by anxiety and fear. With all her loved ones in danger, Evie feels useless at home. She wants to be more involved and, as a woman, she wants to step up and help her countrymen in any way she can. In parallel to Thomas and Will’s recount of life in the trenches, we hear from Evie and her feelings of futility while remaining at home.
‘It all feels so fragile. Like silk beginning to fray, and once that thread begins to unravel, it is difficult to stop it. War makes me question everything. It makes me feel brave and then foolish and then reckless with my emotions so that I don’t quite know who I am anymore’
The letters span those horrendous years of The Great War when a world was left forever scarred. We hear the stories of courage and valor, of terror and anguish, of hopelessness and heartbreak.
Last Christmas in Paris is a special tribute to all those brave soldiers of war, who stepped up and fought for the freedom of others, who put their lives at risk so that others would survive. These brave men and women deserve to be remembered, they deserve their place in history
‘If we owe our men anything, it is to seek the truth of the war in which they fought and to remember them…..Above all, we must always remember them’
Last Christmas In Paris is a remarkable tale of love, heartache and passion, but it is also a tale of sorrow, grief and fear. Beautifully written with moments of pure poetry in it’s words, there is an eloquence to every sentence written. The descriptions, the emotive content, the style of the chapters all contribute to making this a truly mesmerising read.
Evie and Thomas broke my heart and I am so very grateful to Hazel Gaynor and Heather Webb for bringing them into my life.
And YES I do recommend!!
Purchase Link ~ Last Christmas In Paris
Hazel Gaynor is a New York Times bestselling, award-winning author, who lives in County Kildare, Ireland with her husband and two children.
All Hazel’s novels have been received to critical-acclaim and have been translated into a number of foreign languages.
Website ~ https://www.hazelgaynor.com/
Twitter ~ @HazelGaynor
After many years of travel, Heather Webb settled in a rural town in New England. For a decade Heather taught high school students but when the writing bug hit, she left her job and entered the world of publishing.
Heather’s historical novels have received starred national reviews, and a Goodread’s Top Pick in 2015, with works sold in 10 countries and featured in national print media.
Website ~ http://www.heatherwebbauthor.com/
Twitter ~ @msheatherwebb
I think this will be featuring in a lot of top reads lists this year! Such a gorgeous read and a fabulous review Mairead.
Joanne thank you so much. It so deserves to be up there!! Isn’t it just wonderful! x
Oh I need to pick this up! I just finished Gaynor’s book ‘The Cottingley Secret’ and fell head over heels. This sounds wonderful!
Danielle it really is! I loved Cottingley also. Gorgeous stories. Enjoy! x