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Charlotte Gray

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks

In 1942, Charlotte Gray, a young scottish woman, goes to Occupied France on a dual mission: to run an apparently simple errand for a British special oeprations group and to search for her lover, an English airman who has gone missing in action. In the small town of Lavaurette, Sebastian Faulks presents a microcosm of France and its agony in 'the black years'. Here is the full range of collaboration, from the tacit to the enthusistic, as well as examples of extraordinary courage and altruism. Through the local resistance chief Julien, Charlotte meets his father, a Jewish painter whose inspiration has failed him.
In a series of shocking narrative climaxes in which the full extent of French collusion in the Nazi holocaust is delineated, Faulks brings the story to a resolution of redemptive love. In the delicacy of its writing, the intimacy of its characterisation and its powerful narrative scenes of harrowing public events, Charlotte Gray is a worthy successor to Birdsong.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 1, 1999
      Readers of the bestseller Birdsong may hope that Faulks's third novel will furnish another mesmerizing narrative with a piercing love story and the kinds of details that vitalized his descriptions of life in the trenches during WWII. Although this novel does not, sadly, equal its predecessor in terms of seductive readability, its setting in occupied France during WWII and its depiction of the sentiments that motivated many Frenchmen to identify emotionally with the Germans rather than their longtime foe, Britain, grants the story intrinsic interest. But Faulks falters when he asks us to believe that pragmatic young Scotswoman Charlotte Gray is so transformed by her love for RAF airman Peter Gregory that she determines to parachute into France to find him after he disappears on a mission somewhere in the Free Zone. Disguising her motivation, she volunteers for the government's secret G-Section, where her uncanny talent for memorizing documents, her nerves of steel and her equanimity when parachuting into Occupied France after scant training may leave readers incredulous. Even more problematic is Charlotte's sense of transcendent mission, her mystical feeling, stressed again and again, that she has received "a call" to find Peter, and that her work for the Resistance is a "compelling urgency of personal and moral force" that will "change my life.. save my soul... and save soul as well." In evoking the mood and atmosphere of 1942-1943 France, however, Faulks provides the nuanced detail that invests the novel with authenticity, irony and pathos. Charlotte's dangerous maneuvers as she meets Resistance members and integrates herself into the village of Lavaurette, and the alternating chapters that reveal Peter's predicament, are genuinely absorbing. When Faulks introduces two small Jewish boys who are left behind in the village when their parents are deported, their heartrending situation adds tension. Yet Faulks undermines these effective scenes with a plot device that fizzles: veiled hints about Charlotte's "betrayal and violation" by her father when she was a child. Despite the psychological inconsistencies, however, in the end, it is the convincing settings--the wartime London singles scene, the old boy spy network, and daily life in an ideologically and politically divided France--that shape dramatic immediacy.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Jamie Glover's narration of Sebastian Faulks's critically acclaimed novel is mesmerizingly good. Once begun, you will want to do nothing but listen to this romantic adventure set during WWII. In 1942, Scottish Charlotte Gray, who is in London to aid the war effort, is in love with a British airman. Soon, the airman disappears over France, and Charlotte herself is sent into southern France to help the French Resistance. Glover paces his reading beautifully, often keeping listeners on the edge of their seats. In addition, he handles the large international cast remarkably--Gray's Scottish voice, the French accents, the varieties of English accents--all faultless. Only the one American character is flawed--but no matter, she disappears quickly. A grand production. A.C.S. Winner of AUDIOFILE Earphones Award. (c) AudioFile 2000, Portland, Maine
    • AudioFile Magazine
      Samuel West has a splendid voice and makes it leap through hoops. He's slightly Scottish for Charlotte Gray, the eponymous beauty somewhat inclined to depression. He's English for the RAF pilot who gives her a reason to live. Then he's very "pip, pip" through the nostrils for the officers that send them both into France and behind enemy lines. Not a mindless thriller, really not a thriller at all, this is literature, an attempt to inhabit others. We come to understand the banality of evil, a Vichy France that not only collected its own people, but paid Germany for the trains they rode in and for the meals they ate on the way to the death camps. B.H.C. Winner of AUDIOFILE Earphones Award (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine

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