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Editorial content for The House I Loved

Contributors

Reviewer (text)

Amy Gwiazdowski

There are books where the beginning hints at the ending. THE HOUSE I LOVED is one such book, but knowing how this one will end is what makes it so special. It builds very slowly, and before you know it, you’ve been picked up and carried to the end.

A Parisian widow in mourning for many years, Rose Bazelet still maintains a rather full life on the rue Childebert in the house left to her by her husband. She has her friends and her routines, but when Emperor Napoleon III decides to bring Paris into the modern age by destroying what’s considered quaint by her neighborhood’s standards and replacing it with modern and better functioning buildings and facilities, her world comes crashing down. Rose does not want her Paris, the one where memories of her deceased husband and son reside, to be torn down and rebuilt. She takes a stand and makes the decision to fight for her home, her life, and her street. She tells everyone she knows that she will not be abandoning her family home, and nothing --- not money or destruction --- will make her leave the house she feels she must protect at all costs for the husband she dearly misses.

"There are books where the beginning hints at the ending. THE HOUSE I LOVED is one such book, but knowing how this one will end is what makes it so special. It builds very slowly, and before you know it, you’ve been picked up and carried to the end."

Hiding in the basement of her home, with frequent visits from Gilbert, a homeless man who has taken to protecting and helping Rose, she writes to her husband. In both long and short letters, she tells him about her fight and how the man at the office treated her as if her home and life meant nothing. Rose reveals long-held secrets to him, secrets she has never told another living person. She writes about her neighbors who have brought her joy over the years and have kept her company after his death. As the day of destruction nears, her letters become more heartwrenching, sad and poignant.

I’m the type of person who will read the last page of a book before I start. I love spoilers just that much. THE HOUSE I LOVED was the first book in a very long time where that didn’t happen. I had a feeling I knew how this one was going to end, and I don’t say this as a way of ruining the book for anyone. The beauty is really in the letters and memories Rose is telling and reliving for her husband. Some of the memories were lovely --- for instance, when she begins her love of reading and how she tells her husband that she now finally understands how he could sit for hours absorbed in a book. A reader would love that! Others are awful, sad memories that only impending change would cause her to reveal.

I don’t want you to think the novel is only sad. In a way it is, but it’s also very heartwarming, and the picture that Tatiana de Rosnay paints of this little street in Paris in the 1860s is very vibrant. The parks, the buildings and the people are alive in Rose’s letters. And while Rose’s world is very small, it feels much grander thanks to the words she writes to her beloved husband. Her description of a neighbor and friend, local florist Alexandrine, is wonderful, and you can see how close the women are and how much they admire and need one another. It’s in these letters about Alexandrine that you catch glimpses of Rose’s relationship with the daughter she never felt close to, and you see why she feels so loving toward Alexandrine.

At first, I thought of Rose as a stubborn old woman, but soon found myself admiring the character for her strength and convictions. To her, the house was more than just simple bricks and mortar. It was her life and the memories that kept her going. She refused to part with it for reasons that only she understood, but also out of love for a husband she wanted desperately to feel close to after his death. THE HOUSE I LOVED is a love story on more than one level.

Teaser

 

The Paris of the 1860s is a time of change for Rose Bazelet. A widow living in a neighborhood marked for improvement by the Emperor Napoleon, she takes a stand and vows never to leave her family home. She spends her days reliving memories of her husband and family in the house she has come to love as much as the people who inhabited it.

Promo

The Paris of the 1860s is a time of change for Rose Bazelet. A widow living in a neighborhood marked for improvement by the Emperor Napoleon, she takes a stand and vows never to leave her family home. She spends her days reliving memories of her husband and family in the house she has come to love as much as the people who inhabited it.

About the Book

Paris, France: 1860s. Hundreds of houses are being razed, whole neighborhoods reduced to ashes. By order of Emperor Napoleon III, Baron Haussmann has set into motion a series of large-scale renovations that will permanently alter the face of old Paris, molding it into a “modern city.” The reforms will erase generations of history --- and in the midst of the tumult, one woman will take a stand.

Rose Bazelet is determined to fight against the destruction of her family home until the very end. As others flee, she stakes her claim in the basement of the old house on rue Childebert, ignoring the sounds of change that come closer and closer each day. Attempting to overcome the loneliness of her daily life, she begins to write letters to Armand, her beloved late husband. And as she delves into the ritual of remembering, Rose is forced to come to terms with a secret that has been buried deep in her heart for 30 years.