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33 Place Brugmann

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 12 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 12 weeks

"Alice Austen uses her considerable gifts to remind us that the past and the present are more connected than we wish to believe, and that vigilance, loyalty and art hold the key to survival. This is a beautiful and deeply engaging novel." — Ann Patchett, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Tom Lake

An outstanding debut novel—a love story, mystery, and philosophical puzzle, told in the singular voices of the residents of a Beaux Arts apartment house in Belgium during World War II.

On the eve of the Nazi occupation, in the heart of Brussels, life for the residents of 33 Place Brugmann is about to change forever.

Charlotte Sauvin, an art student raised by her beloved architect father in apartment 4L, knows all the details of the building and its people: how light falls on wood floors and voices echo off the marble staircase, the distinct knock of her dear friend, Julian Raphaël, the son of the art dealer's family across the hall. Then the Raphaëls disappear, leaving everything behind but their priceless art collection, which has simply vanished.

All else that's familiar fractures when whispers of German occupation become reality, and the lives of the residents grow increasingly intertwined. Charlotte's godmother Masha, a beautiful seamstress living upstairs, deepens her risky affair with a wartime compatriot of Colonel Warlemont in 3L—a man far more calculating than his neighbors believe. When a Nazi functionary with an interest in the Raphaëls moves into the building, knowing who can and cannot be trusted becomes a matter of life and death.

In the face of their perilous new reality, every member of this accidental community will discover they are not the person they believed themself to be. When confronted with a cruel choice—submit to the regime or risk their lives to save one another—each learns the truth about what, and who, matters to them the most.

A propulsive and exquisitely written tour de force, 33 Place Brugmann champions the restorative power of love, courage, and art in times of great threat.

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    • Kirkus

      Starred review from January 15, 2025
      The dramatically intertwined fates of the residents of a Beaux Arts apartment building in Brussels, 1939-43. The fiction debut of filmmaker and playwright Austen, this novel opens with a notarized roster of building residents, from the refugee seamstress Masha Balyayeva in the 5th floor maid's room to the Sauvin and Rapha�l families in 4L and 4R, to the building manager and preparer of this list, Jan Everard, on the ground floor. In an impressive display of Austen's storytelling skill, about a dozen of these individuals become point-of-view characters, unfurling an unusually colorful and intelligent, poignant and rich World War II novel, a special treat for the many fans of that genre. "To me, architecture is an idea about how we should live. A good architect creates a system of communication and relationships," says Francois Sauvin, architect, in conversation with his neighbor, the art dealer Leo Rapha�l--an idea that resonates through the novel in many ways. These two are the parents of Charlotte Sauvin, a gifted though colorblind painting student, and Julian Rapha�l, aspiring filmmaker doing maths at Cambridge, childhood best friends and would-be lovers, if only Charlotte hadn't met someone else at art school. In any case, all these lives are about to be derailed by the arrival of the Nazis, and as the novel opens in 1939, the Rapha�l family has already disappeared overnight, along with their important painting collection (the mystery of the location of the paintings is one of myriad subplots Austen manages brilliantly). As the novel rotates among its plethora of first-person narrators, each with a distinctive voice, from the wry and cultured Sauvin to the horrible busybody Miss Hobert in 3R, the issue of how to live in terrible times is explored with insight, compassion, and steeliness. Among many ancillary pleasures is the ongoing attempt of the characters to make sense of the philosophy of Wittgenstein, and from his writing arises imagery that gives the novel's fabric a furbelow of magical realism. Excellent banter also leavens the mix. In an exchange between horrible Hobert and architect Sauvin: "'If I were you--' she began. 'And thank goodness, you're not. If life has taught me anything, it's that we need fewer men in this world.'" After a somewhat decorous launch, the charming characters get themselves a thrilling, moving plot. Cr�me de la WWII novel.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from February 1, 2025
      Charlotte Sauvin, one of the young residents of 33 Place Brugmann in Brussels, might believe that the fortress-like apartment building will spare its residents the worst of history. But it's 1939, and her favorite neighbors, the Rapha�ls, have already left, their collection of art mysteriously disappeared. As the Nazis continue their relentless march across Europe, the residents arrive at the sobering realization that they are subject to the vicissitudes of history just like everybody else. Through an arresting symphony of the residents' voices, debut novelist Austen carves a special place in the much-surveyed landscape of Holocaust fiction, especially in her homage to the importance of art. Equally remarkable is her ability to bestow attention on each of the many characters while still driving the plot forward. Among the many are art dealer Leo Rapha�l and his son Julian, who finds a new purpose in the war. The systematic build-up to what we know is coming is a master class in assembling disparate experiences to form a whole. And seemingly peripheral players take center stage as the story reaches its tense conclusion. In a powerfully well-written novel, the most chilling thought is subtly said: "What is thinkable is also possible."

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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