The brightest star in Paris

Diana Biller

Book - 2021

"Diana Biller's The Brightest Star in Paris is a novel about first loves...and second chances. Amelie St. James, prima ballerina of the Paris Opera Ballet and sweetheart of Paris, is a fraud. Seven years ago, in the devastating aftermath of the Siege of Paris, she made a decision to protect her sister: she became the bland, sweet, pious "St. Amie" the ballet needed to restore its scandalous reputation. But when her first love reappears and the ghosts of her past come back to haunt her, all her hard-fought safety is threatened. Dr. Benedict Moore has never forgotten the girl who helped him embrace life again after he almost lost his. Now, years later, he's back in Paris. His goals are to recruit promising new scienti...sts, and maybe to see Amelie again. When he discovers she's in trouble, he's desperate to help her-after all, he owes her. When she finally agrees to let him help, they disguise their time together with a fake courtship. But reigniting old feelings is dangerous, especially when their lives are an ocean apart. Will they be able to make it out with their hearts intact?"--

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Published
New York : St. Martin's Griffin 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Diana Biller (author)
Edition
First Edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9781250297877
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A prima ballerina in 1870s Paris is haunted by the ghosts of wronged women in this atmospheric sequel to Biller's The Widow of Rose House. Amelie St. James has made herself into a living saint in the eyes of the public in order to cover up her ballet company's scandals. Exhausted and with an untreated hip injury, she's grimly enduring the two remaining years until she can retire. Then she starts seeing the ghosts of women she once knew: Lise Martin, a murdered ballerina; Rachel Bonnard, who was executed for arson; and Violette, a cabaret singer and Amelie's former neighbor. The only person who can help is Dr. Benedict Moore, Amelie's first love, with whom she shares dark memories of the horrific traumas of the Franco-Prussian War; the Siege of Paris, which ended the war; and the 1871 Paris Commune, an insurrection that followed. The anachronistic-feeling Moore family offer significant mood whiplash, as their 21st-century sitcom antics do not mesh well with an otherwise dark story. Historically minded readers especially will take issue with how these characters speak, think, and act like modern Americans. Still, Biller's fans will enjoy the feminist romance filtered through familiar gothic tropes. (Oct.)

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