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Amandine

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Marlena de Blasi, the acclaimed author of such delectable memoirs as A Thousand Days in Venice and That Summer in Sicily, now brings her luminous prose to the world of fiction with this remarkable debut novel. Set against the backdrop of Europe as it moves inexorably toward World War II, Amandine follows a young orphan’s journey in search of her heritage.
The story opens in Krakow in 1931, as a baby girl is conceived out of wedlock, the byproduct of a foolish heart and a tragic inheritance. The child’s grandmother, a countess, believes that she is protecting her daughter when she claims that the baby didn’t survive. In truth, however, she deposits the infant at a remote convent in the French countryside, leaving her with a great sum of money and in the care of a young governess named Solange.
Solange takes it upon herself to give the child a distinctive name, Amandine, and the two form a special bond. But even Solange’s unconditional love cannot protect her charge. Mistrusted by both the abbess and the convent girls, the unusually astute and curious Amandine finds her childhood filled with challenges and questions: Who is she? Where does she come from?
   
Eventually, Solange is forced to choose between the terrors of the convent and those of a global war looming outside its doors. Thus, with a purseful of worthless francs and a sack of provisions, the two flee north toward Solange’s childhood home. But what should have been a two-day journey by train becomes a perilous, years-long odyssey across Occupied France—and deeper into the treacheries of war.
Tracing the flight of Amandine and Solange while peering into the lives of the countess and her daughter, Amandine’s mother, who still mourns and dreams of the child she thinks she lost forever, Marlena de Blasi’s epic novel winds its way toward a dramatic and compelling conclusion, as mother and daughter draw ever nearer. Amandine is a sumptuous tale of identity and survival, persistent hope and unexpected love.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 11, 2010
      De Blasi, a bestselling memoirist (A Thousand Days in Venice
      ) and food-writer, makes a solid fiction debut with this poignant tale of an orphan growing up in Europe as it descends into WWII. Amandine Gilberte Noiret de Crécy, an illegitimate child born into Polish royalty and ditched at five months by her grandmother at a convent in Montpellier, grows up surrounded by a loving governess, Solange Jouffroi, and adoring nuns and priests. Yet the bitter abbess, Mother Paul, who runs the convent, inexplicably loathes her. Aware of this hatred and longing to find her birth mother, Amandine becomes a serious child who believes there is something wrong with her. After a rash of scarlet fever breaks out at the convent, Solange decides to take Amandine to live with her family, and not long after they leave the convent grounds, they are confronted with the horror the war has brought to France, which has especially dire consequences for Solange. In de Blasi’s tale of unexpected turns taken during the search for understanding and identity, she balances heartbreak, loneliness, fear, and hope with aplomb.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from April 15, 2010
      The best-selling author of such culinary treasures as "A Thousand Days in Tuscany" and "A Thousand Days in Venice" makes her fiction debut with this historical novel set in World War II France. The story centers on Amandine, an aristocratic child raised as an orphan in a convent. We follow her as she survives the hardships and cruelty of both life in the convent and the war-torn world. As Amandine experiences loss after loss, her longing grows for the mother she never knew. Yet Amandine is able to embrace the beauty and love of those who care for her. VERDICT The sights, sounds, smells, and tastes of Amandine's journey through life are palpable, and the reader shares in the sensual nature of the food described. The story is captivating, the characters are alive, and readers will hunger for more as the novel ends. Truly, de Blasi can be considered the Julia Child of fiction. A wonderful read for both fans of historical fiction and women's fiction and one that shouldn't be missed. [Library marketing.]Melody Ballard, Pima Cty. P.L., Tucson, AZ

      Copyright 2010 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2010
      Orphaned Amandine grows up in a convent in southern France. The inconvenient offspring of Eastern European nobility, she had been spirited out of Poland to Montpellier in infancy. Daily she has to endure the implacable ill will of the Abbess, who keeps her aloof from the rest of the children in the convent school. But Amandines spirited governess treats her tenderly and helps Amandine through the normal anxieties of a young girl wondering where or even who her mother might be. Amandines unrequited yearnings stoke her imagination, growing yet more intense as she reaches young adulthood. Then the Nazi invasion of France upends her serene environment but offers new opportunities for Amandine to fulfill the quest to discover her first identity. Wartime France provides a vivid, dramatic background, and De Blasis experience as a food writer makes her descriptions of meals throughout the book even more evocative.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2010, American Library Association.)

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