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Love in the Tempest of History: A French Resistance Story
 
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Love in the Tempest of History: A French Resistance Story [Hardcover]

Aude Yung-de Prevaux (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 10, 2001
In 1966, a young student doing research in the National Library of France was confronted by an elderly gentleman who had overheard her name. Despite her polite denials, he insisted that she must be the daughter of the Resistance heroes Jacques and Lotka de Prevaux. Curious about the strange episode, Aude Yung-de Prevaux recounted the story to her mother. To Aude's amazement, her mother confirmed the old man's account and, shockingly, admitted she was actually Aude's aunt. Thus began an odyssey of discovery that uncovered not only Aude Yung-de Prevaux's own hidden history, but also that of her tragic parents and their doomed love -- one of the most haunting stories of the Second World War.

Using the tattered letters and military records she found in the trunks containing her father's belongings -- now reclaimed from a godfather living in Morocco -- as well as personal interviews, Yung-de Prevaux has reconstructed the lives of the parents she never knew. From the shadows of the chaotic war years emerges her real father, brother to the one she had known. Jacques Trolley de Prevaux was a brilliant and handsome vice admiral with a gift for diplomacy -- and a penchant for literature, bohemian company, and opium. A slave to his appetites, as well as to his high ideals, he suffered all his life from contradictory impulses -- loyalty to the navy, now controlled by Vichy, and loyalty to an independent France; respect for tradition and scorn for society's suffocating rules; dedication to family and a thirst for adventure; duty to his wife and passion for his soul mate. From the murkiness of a Polish shtetl and the seething throngs of turn-of-the-century New York, with all the prejudices ofthe Old World and the sufferings of the New, emerged the true image of Aude's mother, Charlotte Leitner, known to everyone as Lotka. A beautiful American-born Polish Jew who worked as a fashion model in Paris, this headstrong and fiery woman refused to stay any course not of her own choosing. Across class, social, and religious lines she pursued her love, and she stole his heart with no regard for the cost. To the horror of his staunchly Catholic haute-bourgeois family and her insecure and modest Jewish parents, these lovers sloughed off their former selves, married, and forged a new life. With boundless faith that their love would overcome all obstacles, they set out to create their own world -- until the horrors of war shattered their reality.

And yet chaos would bring out their most heroic selves -- and cause their ultimate destruction. They pledged themselves to the service of their country in its darkest hour, and the bravery they demonstrated as a couple made them two of the most significant Resistance fighters in the south of France. But for all their bravery, nothing would redeem them to Jacques' indignant family, not even the tragic climax when, betrayed days before the Allies liberated their prison, they were executed on the orders of Klaus Barbie in August 1944 -- making an orphan of the author, their little girl. This extraordinary story, revealed as a result of one woman's quest to discover her past, recaptures a lost chapter in the history of a nation at war and returns to the pantheon two of its most romantic heroes.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Spies for the French Resistance during WWII, Jacques and Lotka de Pr‚vaux were awarded seven medals and honors for their efforts, which included providing intelligence that led to the Normandy Invasion. They were executed by the Nazis when their daughter, the author, was an infant. She was raised by a paternal uncle and aunt, and the true identity of her parents was kept from her. Then, in 1966, when Yung-de Pr‚vaux was 23, an elderly man in the BibliothŠque Nationale in Paris saw her writing her name down and blurted out her family history. And what a history: Jacques descended from aristocrats and from a long line of Catholics who counted Joan of Arc's older brother as a forebear. Lotka was a stunning Polish Jew who came to Paris to study fashion and captured Jacques's heart. Even before he'd begun divorce proceedings against his first wife, Jacques was writing Lotka letters brimming with passion. Unfortunately, that's about all the passion readers are likely to find in these pages. A journalist, Yung-de Pr‚vaux tells her parents' story with a surprising professional detachment. (Writing about her christening, she refers to herself as "little Aude de Pr‚vaux.") There are lots of details about the couple's history and spy work and ships (Jacques was a naval officer), but for a book with "love" and "tempest" in the title, this one is frustratingly devoid of emotion.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Journalist Yung-de Pr vaux, a frequent contributor to French and Swiss publications, lovingly reconstructs the lives of her parents, forgotten French Resistance heroes Jacques and Lotka de Pr vaux. Because their executions occurred while she was still an infant, she never learned the true story of her origin until a chance encounter when she was 23 and a student in Paris. Determined to rescue them from oblivion and satisfy her own quest for self-knowledge, she spent years investigating their lives. Jacques, a French naval officer, scandalized his family by divorcing his wife of many years and marrying a Polish-Jewish emigrant 20 years his junior. The spirited, beautiful Lotka, a model, couturier, and beautician, had been his longtime mistress, but civil and naval obstacles delayed their marriage until early in the war. Soon their personal passion became a shared political one, and both assumed roles in the Resistance, where they would ultimately meet their deaths. Raised by her paternal aunt, the author was shielded from the circumstances of her birth for both personal and political reasons. While this is primarily a personal story lacking historical analysis, the beautifully crafted and fascinating romance does provide some insights into Resistance activities. Recommended for general readers interested in World War II. Marie Marmo Mullaney, Caldwell Coll., NJ
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Free Press; First Edition edition (April 10, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743201949
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743201940
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.4 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,728,231 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Love and resistance in World War II., April 26, 2004
By 
Kevin M Quigg (Gettysburg, Pennsylvania United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Love in the Tempest of History: A French Resistance Story (Hardcover)
The author is the daughter of two French resistance figures of World War II. Her father was a French naval captain who divorced at mid age and married a young Polish Jew living in Paris. When the French gave up and signed an armistice, this captain wanted to fight on and joined the Resistance. Rather than escaping to London where he could have served in the Free French Navy as a high officer, he serves as a resistance figure and climbs to the head of a cell. He is then tortured and shot with his wife just before the liberation of much of France. It is a sad tale.
This is a short book, and as the previous reviewer notes, makes these heroes come to light with all their positive and negative characteristics. I feel I was reading something very personal when I read this book. Since the original book was in French, perhaps the translator did not do a great job in the translation. This is why I rated it only three stars. Also, a more detailed description of the aftermath could have been done describing how the daughter was adopted by her uncle and what happened to the Leitner family children.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Literary Monument to Two Heros of the Resistance, April 24, 2004
This review is from: Love in the Tempest of History: A French Resistance Story (Hardcover)
Let's get a couple of things straight.

1) Little of the story has to do directly with the French Resistance.

2) This is still a vital, interesting and perhaps even historically important work.

Ms. Yung-de-Prevaux, in a notable work of journalistic digging, resurrected her deceased parents in a monument to their heroism during the war.

Through her work, they live and breathe again as people, not dusty historic figures, but people with desires, wants, frustrations and faults, who, seeing their country overrun by barbarians, chose to fight and die together rather than submit to their conquest.

Their actions in organizing and operating a major resistance information-gathering cell covering the Mediterranean coast, undoubtedly saved the lives of thousands of troops and helped with the eventual liberation of Europe.

Tragically, Aude never new her parents except through her research, and equally tragically they were executed mere days from liberation.

This book is the account of their lives, and, as such, is better documented for the period before the war--but then, so much of what was done by resistance and special forces has never and probably never will come to light, having been taken to the grave by those heroes who performed these actions.

What we are left with, is a picture of these two very human people, their lives before the war and how these fairly ordinary extraordinary people came to make the choices they did to risk (and lose) everything for the sake of others.

Like so many heroes, they died mostly unknown by and unappreciated by those for whom they died. Thanks to their daughter, their worth is now more publicly known.

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