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Powerful piece of bric-à-brac

Madeleine Kingsley praises a found-by-chance memoir

January 12, 2018 13:57
No Place final.jpg
2 min read

Francoise Frenkel’s memoir offers a reminder never to disdain jumble. It was at a bric-à-brac sale in 2010 that her remarkable 1945 account of Nazi persecution in Southern France resurfaced. It is not at all the book that Frenkel would have imagined writing in 1930s Berlin, where she opened the first-ever, specialist French-language bookstore.

Against all commercial odds, this Polish-born, French-educated Jewish intellectual created a cultural hub where such authors as Gide, Colette and Maurois came to talk, or to read from their latest works. “I loved my bookstore,” writes Frenkel, “the way a woman loves, that is to say, truly.”

Her book begins while she is still living her dream, destroyed over a matter of months by the Brownshirts. Frenkel left it too late to sell the store and, after Kristallnacht, simply walked away having bid her beloved books goodbye: “I went from shelf to shelf, tenderly stroking the spines of the books… I leaned over the limited editions. How many times had I been too attached, refusing to sell one or another of them.”

Frenkel’s refined life of the mind gave way to terror as she remained — barely — one step ahead of the occupying forces, fleeing from Paris, to Vichy, Avignon and on to Nice and the Midi countryside. Her tale, in which she set down these personal and perilous events while they were still vividly raw, packs great power. But her chronicle of how “horror made itself at home in everyday life” is also more cruelly surreal for being played out in places now synonymous with hedonistic holidays — the cerulean-blue Med, the Niçoise flower market and a Gobelin-tapestried mountain château.