Books I’ve Read Set in WW2

Normany beach, scene of D-Day landings

This week events took place to commemorate the 80th anniversary of D-Day on 6th June 1944 when Allied forces staged the largest seaborne invasion in history on the beaches of Normandy. This decisive event changed the course of the Second World War.

Here are some books I’ve read set in the WW2. I hope there’s something for everyone in this list whether you favour adventure, mystery, crime, thriller or romance in your historical fiction or have an interest in reading books written during the war. Links from each title will take you to my review.

  1. Mr Bunting At War by Robert Greenwood
  2. A Better Place by Stephen Daisley
  3. Darkness Does Not Come At Once by Glenn Bryant
  4. The Night Raids by Jim Kelly
  5. The Blood of Others by Graham Hurley
  6. Dead of Night by Simon Scarrow
  7. The Lace Weaver by Lauren Chater
  8. My Father’s House by Joseph O’Connor
  9. SBS: Special Boat Squadron by Iain Gale
  10. A Sunlit Weapon (Maisie Dobbs #17) by Jacqueline Winspear
  11. These Days by Lucy Caldwell
  12. Hitler’s Taster by V.S. Alexander
  13. Dear Mrs Bird by A.J. Pearce
  14. Stella by Takis Wurger
  15. A Prince and A Spy by Rory Clements
  16. Blitz Writing: Night Shift & It Was Different At The Time by Inez Holden
  17. City of Spies by Mara Timon
  18. A Ration Book Wedding by Jean Fullerton
  19. Crooked Heart by Lissa Evans
  20. The Bird in the Bamboo Cage by Hazel Gaynor

Book Review – French Windows by Antoine Laurain trans. by Louise Rogers Lalaurie @GallicBooks

About the Book

Book cover of French Windows by Antoine Laurain

Nathalia, a young photographer, is seeing a therapist. Having accidentally photographed a murder, she finds that she can no longer do her job.

Instead, Doctor Faber suggests that she write about the people she observes in the building opposite. Starting with the actor turned YouTube life coach on the ground floor and going all the way up to the fifth floor, Nathalia creates vivid accounts of the lives of each of her neighbours. Are her stories real or imaginary?

With each session, the doctor and his mysterious patient will get closer to the truth. But as they approach the final floor of the building, Nathalia’s stories take a truly deadly turn . . .

Format: Hardcover (208 pages) Publisher: Gallic Books
Publication date: 6th June 2024 Genre: Contemporary Fiction, Mystery

Find French Windows on Goodreads

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My Review

In my eyes, a new book by Antoine Laurain is always cause for celebration because you can be sure you’ll be entertained in fine style. I was first introduced to his writing when I read The President’s Hat in 2016, which I described as ‘quirky, humorous and charming’. I found The Reader’s Room (2020) equally entertaining and I loved Red Is My Heart (2022), a collaboration with artist Le Sonneur.

French Windows pays an obvious homage to the 1954 film Rear Window, directed by Alfred Hitchcock and based on a short story by American author, Cornell Woolrich, but has a deliciously French flavour and displays the author’s trademark wit. As well as being a clever mystery, the accounts Dr Faber encourages Natalie to write describing the lives of the occupants of the apartment building across from her own are wonderful ‘stories within a story’, little snapshots if you’ll pardon the pun of other lives. Something the individuals have in common is change in their lives, in some cases prompted by quite inconsequential things such as a computer screensaver.

Dr Faber has his own little quirks. For example, his passion for collecting passepartout keys (keys that can open any door in a building), perhaps seeing a parallel with his role as a therapist. He regards smoking as akin to an art form, proudly recalling how he acquired the skill of smoking a cigarette ‘hands-free’ and describes himself as ‘a very gifted smoker’. He cannot imagine life without a cigarette, all previous attempts to give up – at the urging of his wife – having failed. But he finds pleasure even in the failed attempts, relishing the ‘special joy’ of each ‘tender reunion’.

From feeling he is control of their therapy sessions, Faber finds himself increasingly compelled to discover whether the stories Nathalie brings him are works of imagination or true. It now seems to be her controlling him as he waits expectantly for her to deliver the next story. When the final one arrives, he gets more than he bargained for.

Even if you’ve worked some of it out before that point, perhaps inspired by the title of one of the author’s previous books, French Windows is still a wonderfully quirky and entertaining read.

I received a digital review copy courtesy of Gallic Books. French Windows is book 1 of my 20 Books of Summer 2024.

In three words: Clever, stylish, witty
Try something similar: Watch Rear Window (1954)


About the Author

Author Antoine Laurain

Antoine Laurain is the award-winning author of novels including The Red Notebook and The President’s Hat. His books have been translated into 25 languages and sold more than 250,000 copies in English. He lives in Paris. (Photo: Publisher author page)

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