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The Girl in the Blue Beret

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Inspired by a true story, the bestselling author of In Country offers a gorgeous, haunting novel about an airline pilot coming to terms with his past, and searching for the people who saved him during World War II. After Marshall Stone's B-17 bomber was shot down in occupied Europe in 1944, people in the French Resistance helped him escape to safety. One of the brave French people who risked their lives for him was a lively girl in Paris—a girl identified by her blue beret. After the war Marshall returned to America, raised a family, and became a successful airline pilot. He tried to forget the war. Now, in 1980, he returns to France and finds himself drawn back in time—memories of the crash, the terror of being alone in a foreign country where German soldiers were hunting down fallen Allied aviators, the long months of hiding. Marshall finds the people who helped him escape from the Nazis and falls in love with the woman who was the girl in the blue beret. He also discovers astonishing revelations about the suffering of the people he had known during the war. Bobbie Ann Mason's novel, inspired by her father-in-law's wartime experiences, is a beautifully woven story of love, war, and second chances.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Bobbie Ann Mason's late father-in-law, a WWII bomber pilot who crashed in Belgium and was helped by one of the French Resistance escape-and-evasion networks, is the inspiration for Marshall Stone, this novel's hero. Narrator Fred Sullivan presents a gravelly voiced Stone, former bomber pilot, now in his sixties and forced to retire from flying jumbo jets. Except for his repeated mispronunciations of Artie Shaw's "Frenesi," Sullivan has precise diction that captures much of the period feeling. Stone's melancholy as he deals with retirement is just right, and when he decides to revisit the Resistance families who helped him, Sullivan's voice reflects his hesitation. Throughout this sentimental journey, Sullivan keeps his emotions on a tight leash. Mason intertwines past and present, history and fiction with seamless storytelling, while Sullivan makes the listening easy. S.J.H. (c) AudioFile 2011, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 14, 2011
      Mason (In Country) is back with a touching novel about love, loss, war, and memory. Shot down over France during WWII, Marshall Stone takes the controls and lands the plane, helping as many of his surviving airmen to safety as he can. He's saved by the French Resistance and ferried from one safe house to the next until he reaches the U.K. In 1980, after being forced into retirement, he returns to the crash site and vows to find those who helped him. Two in particular stand out in his mind: Robert, the dashing young man who helped plan his escape, and Annette, a school girl who lived in one of the safe houses. Moving between the present and the events he revisits, the novel descends deeper and deeper into memory, profoundly revealing how the past haunts the present. Stone learns that Robert and Annette were both punished for the roles they played in the war, and that memory serves us all differently, saving one while destroying another. Mason's latest, based on the real-life experiences of her father-in-law, is fascinating and intensely intimate.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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