James McAuley is the Paris correspondent for the Washington Post and a contributor to the New York Review of Books. He recently received his doctorate in French history at Oxford.
“Engrossing. . . . Traces the long, vexed relationship of these
families with materiality, their faith that they could ‘create
something beautiful in an increasingly hostile environment,’ their
attempt to control works of art as they could not control
life.”—Jackie Wullschläger, Financial Times
“A moving portrait of a glittering, doomed world.”—The
Economist
“Ghosts from the pages of Proust and the paintings of Renoir wander
through sumptuously appointed salons and galleries, charmed to life
by James McAuley in his alluring and disturbing history The House
of Fragile Things. . . . The depths of French anti-Semitism is the
stunning subject that Mr. McAuley lays bare. . . . [He] tells this
haunting saga in eloquent detail. As French anti-Semitism rises
once again today, the effect is nothing less than chilling.”—Diane
Cole, Wall Street Journal
“A comprehensive and accessible account of one of the great
communal acts of generosity—and then betrayal—in modern
history.”—Nicholas Wroe, The Guardian
“Deeply researched and elegantly written. . . . Astute and
perceptive. . . . McAuley’s nuanced narrative leaves the reader
with a range of villains from which to choose.”—Ori Z. Soltes,
Washington Post
“Provides a new narrative that is at once rigorous and sensitive
[and] endows these ‘houses of fragile things,’ which are still
standing today, with a new solidity and life.”—Vincent Delieuvin,
Art Newspaper
“This group portrait re-creates the milieu of fin-de-siècle French
Jewish dynasties like the Rothschilds and the Camondos through the
art collections they amassed. . . . McAuley chronicles how many of
his central figures were deported by the Vichy government and
describes the fate of their collections. A study of ‘obsessions
with objects’ becomes a darker tale.”—New Yorker
“McAuley’s book provides not just an insight into the gathering and
displaying of these collections, but into the lives of the men and
women who put them together, and the extent to which they saw
themselves as intrinsic members of the French
establishment.”—Caroline Moorehead, Times Literary Supplement
“Unsettling. . . . As much as McAuley seeks to recover histories
effaced by the Holocaust, [he] emphasizes that these histories
persist in our present.”—Chelsea Haines, Art in America
“Elegantly written and deeply moving. . . . A meditation on the
shaping and expression of identities through the acquisition and
donation of beautiful things, a glimpse into a world blasted to
dust by the horrors of the twentieth century, and a tragic story
about the unrequited love of men and women for a country that
savagely turned on them. . . . [A] haunting book.”—David A. Bell,
New York Review of Books
“A well-judged investigation.”—Julian Barnes, London Review of
Books
“[McAuley] has a tenderness for his subjects framed by a beautiful
moral register. His conclusions are chilling.”—Helen Elliott, The
Monthly (Australia)
“A superior book must convey a message or present ideas. It must
contribute to enriching understanding. This work certainly meets
these criteria.”—Jay Levinson, Jewish Tribune
“McAuley delicately revives the collections and stories of those
the Nazis sought to annihilate. The result is
compelling.”—Christie’s Magazine
“An enlightening and deeply moving book. . . . As hard to put down
as an exciting novel.”—Harriet Devine, Shiny New Books
“A riveting and devastating account of a battle between the
cultured and sophisticated fin de siècle Parisian art world—mostly
but not exclusively Jewish—and the brutal greed of the Nazis, aided
by the long-standing antisemitism of their French
collaborators.”—Anne Sebba, Jewish Quarterly
Winner of the 2021 National Jewish Book Award, History
category, sponsored by the Jewish Book Council
Winner of the Sixth Annual French Heritage Society Book Award
French Heritage Society Book Award Short List
“This is the book I have been waiting for. A magisterial account of
aspiration and loss. Please read it.”—Edmund de Waal
“A haunting and melancholy book that brings to life a wealthy but
beleaguered Jewish milieu that was determined to demonstrate its
loyalty to France.”—Philip Nord, author of France 1940: Defending
the Republic
“A remarkable book. I’ve finished reading with a sense of wonder at
the unknown world its author recreates for us, and with shock at
how senselessly that world was destroyed.”—Alice Kaplan, author of
Looking for The Stranger: Albert Camus and the Life of a Literary
Classic
“Fascinating, sensitive and heartbreaking, deeply researched and
elegantly written, filled with flamboyant dynasties of art
collectors, McAuley guides us between the chic glamourous
sophistication of the Paris art world and the murderous greed of
the Nazis and their collaborators.”—Simon Sebag Montefiore
“Beautifully written, astoundingly researched and penetrating in
its gaze into an irrecoverable world, both Parisian, European and
Jewish, James McAuley vividly revives a past now on the brink of
escaping living memory. The House of Fragile Things is a book about
art, France, the Holocaust and what it can mean to be a Jew, that
will haunt you long after you have read it.”—Ben Judah, author of
This Is London
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