The Dressmaker's Gift
by Fiona Valpy (2019)
Kindle + Audible
Audio book narrated by Anne Flosnik and Justin Eyre
9 hrs 12 min
* * *
This is a story told from a double perspective of today vs the past. A young woman, Harriet, goes to Paris and obtains a job as well as living quarters in the same building where her grandmother lived and worked as a seamstress back during WWII. She has an old photo from those days of her grandmother with two other girls. As it happens, her own roommate turns out to be the grandchild of one of the two others, and knows more about all three of them. Through her Harriet gets to know their story. They all got involved in the resistance movement in France during the war, and also had to suffer for that.
I agree with some other reviews I read of the book that the double time perspective sometimes really doesn't seem to add all that much, and that to just tell the story of the three women in WWII might have been a better choice. Listening to the audio book, I also found the voices of the two narrators too similar, which didn't help. That said, I still found the book worth reading. For one thing, while I've read many books about WWII, I think they've usually been chiefly from either Jewish or British/American perspective (or Swedish) - rather than from within occupied France and the resistance movement there. For another, it's also quite a powerful story about strong friendship between women helping each other through difficult times.
. . .
The Last Correspondent
by Soraya M. Lane (2020)
Kindle + Audible
Audio book narrated by Sarah Zimmerman
9 hrs 34 min
* * * *
This is a story of similar WWII background as the one above, also with the friendship between three women in focus, and set in France.
Quoting from the publisher's introduction: