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The Beasts of Paris

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I felt that this book was well researched, I don’t know much about this period in French history, so found myself googling things along the way. I was impressed. It took a little while to get into, but once I did I was fully immersed.

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An expertly crafted novel set in Late 19th century Paris on the brink of the Franco Prussian war that would wreak havoc on the city. The storyline centres round three individuals with their own demons to face . Ann a Haitian who had a bad start in life, Ellis a US war surgeon with PTSD and Lawrence a photographer’s assistant struggling with his sexuality. The war has caused mayhem to all and Penney parallels this to the chaos abounding in the menagerie due to the oppression. A weighty novel tackling many issues alive then and still current today

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The award winning Stef Penney's latest offering showcases her historically well researched, atmospheric picture of the Franco-Prussian war, a Paris under siege and its aftermath in 1870-71, through the creation and experiences of her diverse and complex group of characters. She captures the ordinary everyday human relationships and passions, the personal links with the menagerie (zoo) and its 'beasts', where Victor is assistant veterinarian, he has taken care of the majestic Marguerite, a Caspian tigress that has inspired the devotion of Anne. Anne resides at the women's Salpetriere asylum, many of the women there have nowhere else to go. The asylum is run by Dr Jospin who is interested in women's diseases but not in what they have to say, and has no qualms in using them to provide entertainment for other Parisians.

Ellis is a traumatised American medic moving in bohemian circles trying to recast himself as a poet, his uncle is the American ambassador to Paris, we follow the development of his relationship with Lawrence, a Canadian photographer. There is a strong supporting cast that includes Fanny, model and maid, Ernestine who gets engaged to a wealthy widowed butcher because she feels she has no other options, and Papin, the Chief Vetinarian of the Zoo. Outlined are the horrors, stresses and strains of war, the fear, paranoia, the rising tensions, shortages, rising unemployment, the destruction of the woods, the hunger, the freezing cold, deaths and casualties, and the tedium. Needless to say, the animals are not left unaffected, despite efforts to ensure their survival, they are at the mercy of people who can be cruel, try to steal or poison them, and more, raising the question who actually are the 'beasts' of Paris?

Penney's character development is stellar as she highlights the ingenuity of desperation, people at their best trying to support each other, whilst at the other end of the scale is the worst of humanity. At the same time, she skilfully raises issues of animal abuse, race, gender and class inequalities, power, sexual identity, other abuse, a turbulent war whose horrific aftermath leads to a ruthless French government intent on carrying out a war of terror against its own citizens, having no qualms about carrying out non-stop executions. I was completely gripped by the inclusion of animals and the monstrous impact of the war on them, along with the growth and changing perspectives experienced by the likes of Anne and Fanny. A brilliant historical novel that is informative and so engaging that I have no hesitation in recommending it highly. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.

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An intestine a compelling read. I knew little about the siege of Paris and this was a graceful meander through the time.

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I’m a huge fan of the author and couldn’t wait to read The Beasts of Paris, slightly different from her other work. I really enjoyed how much details the author goes into for each character. I got a real sense of who they were, and their individual stories were gripping. The book alternates back and forth between Anne, Lawrence and Ellis until their lives gradually become entwined. This is a gripping, powerful read. I did not want the book to end.

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This is a fascinating novel set in Paris in 1870 just as the Franco-Prussian war was beginning. We follow three main characters as they live out their lives in increasingly difficult conditions. I assumed that the title referred to the animals in the zoo which is where the story begins and is a continued thread throughout the novel. However, as I read, it becomes clear that the beasts don’t only live in the zoo.
I found all three of the main characters to be engaging and was eager to follow their story line. As well as these three, there are a host of other characters from the director of the zoo, to the American Ambassador and Fanny, a photographer’s model. I think Fanny was actually my favourite character. I loved her spirit and cheerfulness and at the end, her determination.
The setting of the story was brilliantly realised. The story moves effortlessly from the caged animals in Jardin des Plantes to Parisian bars and the siege is described in all of its horror. The author’s historical research really brings the city to life.
The story is quite a slow burn and takes a while to get going. I also found the frequent switching between characters made it difficult to really engage with any of them until I was quite a few chapters in.
My one complaint would be that in places the ARC was difficult to read as there were issues with words running together without spaces and other words being misplaced. This made it difficult to read initially. As I became more engrossed in the story, I noticed this less.
Thank you to Net Galley and Quercus Books for my ARC in exchange for my honest review.

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Despite a slow start, 'Beasts of Paris' comes alive in the second half and is very compelling at the very end. The story is set in 1970s Paris, at a time of great unrest in the city and country. First France fights an unsuccessful war against Prussia, resulting in Paris being under siege. Then the unhappy peace is shattered by revolution as demobbed working class soldiers try to bring about a better, socialist society. And finally that short lived revolution - the Paris Commune - is brutally ended by government troops. Throughout it all, Parisians try to get on with their lives without losing them, as their home is turned into a battle ground.

The story focuses on a number of characters, some of whom are connected with the Paris Menagerie (zoo), although the family at the centre of the story are only tangentially linked - they own a photographic studio and are commissioned to take pictures of the animals before war puts a stop to it. Whilst the book's own blurb talks about three characters only, there are lots of characters with their own separate stories and viewpoints. Some perhaps get more page time than others but all play their part.

It was a turbulent and shocking period of history, about which I'd known nothing at all. Mention of revolution in France makes me think of 'Les Miserables', but this is a different uprising some thirty years later. The title might be considered to refer to the zoo animals, or more likely to the humans whose behaviour is more bestial than anything the tigers and panthers come up with. The violence and behaviour of the government towards its own people is shocking.

The book has many strengths, including an interesting historical backdrop, some good characters, and an exciting later part. There are some really complex and fascinating characters - I particularly liked and sympathised with Ellis, a young American doctor haunted by his experiences during the civil war in the USA. He seemed a very real character and someone you could imagine meeting. I found the relationship between him and Laurence - a young photographer - the most compelling storyline and it was that one which really hooked me in, more than any of the war-related ones.

The first half is a bit of hard work to read through - not badly written, but overlong. However it is worth it for the pay off once the story finally gets going. I did find some storylines less compelling than others, but that's often the case with an epic-style novel with multiple threads. Overall Penney has done a great job of writing a historical novel with strong characters and a powerful ending.

I would recommend to readers who enjoy historical novels and general literary fiction, particularly if they have an interest in France, the 19th century, or armed conflict. It is not much about animals, so don't read for that reason alone.

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This historical novel is told through the eyes of several individuals from different strata of society and is rich in detail of the atrocities. For the full review, please go to https://www.tumblr.com/joebloggshere/719642070908862464/the-beasts-of-paris-by-stef-penney-set-in-paris-in?source=share

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A completely entrancing and extensive deep dive into a fascinating episode in Paris history, with a panoramic range of characters and plots woven carefully together with great skill.

From Anne, recent inhabitant of the madhouse to Ellis, running away from his own self in drink and denial, each character is deeply drawn and also used to present a tapestry of life and conditions in the people who find themselves trapped in Paris during the siege of 1870 and the subsequent rise of the Communards.

The beasts of the title area not confined to the ailing menagerie, as we are shown all manner of cruelty and unkindnesses, but also great tenderness and care of people for each other.

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An exquisite, relevant and immersive novel of humanity and beasts, self-discovery and survival set amid a Paris in flames. The characters' powerful narratives are interwoven so deftly that, as with all the best novels, you can't see the stitches but are just carried away with the story.

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This was a very interesting novel, set during the period of the Franco-Prussian War, the Siege of Paris, and the short-lived government of Paris by a Commune of Workers which was overthrown by a bloody counter-attack by Versailles Government forces
It features a range of main characters: a veterinarian in the Paris Menagerie who is particularly affectionate towards the Big Cats in his charge, especially Elsa, a Siberian tigress; Anne, a former inmate of the Salpietre Asylum, where she has been one of the subjects of Charot's famous-or notorious- displays of his female patients acting out their manias under hypnosis for the entertainment of the Parisian Beau Monde; a young artist's model who is married to a violent young man, but who follows him onto the barricades during the Commune and ends up imprisoned as a result; and two young homosexual men, one American, one Canadian, who play out their love affair amidst the horrors of the Siege and its even more dreadful aftermath.
The pace was good, and the characters were all engaging and believable.
It was also interesting to discover that the animals in the Zoo were killed to provide meat for the starving citizens during the Siege, and how brutally the citizens who supported the Commune were suppressed after their brief spell in Government. Goodreads Rating 4 stars.

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The Beasts of Paris is an extremely interesting story full of unexpected details about nineteenth century Paris. As I've done a lot of research about historical Paris, I was surprised at not having encountered some of the details in the book. I had to go digging in historical texts to find out. This is something that only happens with a rare novel that makes you wonder about the reality of the time period.

The book is set in 1870, when a lot of things were going on in Paris. I’d never really studied this period and it’s quite fascinating. There’s an odd shift that happens in a real war set in a time before modern warfare. Not that this book is primarily about war, but still it lends the time period an otherworldly feel.

The underground zoo charmed me right away. Then there’s a love story, a lot of twists and turns, adventure, tension, suspense. How could I not love it?

My one difficulty with the book is that it’s in present terse, which I know a lot of people love, but for me it has to be done in such a way that I don’t notice or I find it difficult to suspend my disbelief. It’s for this reason I’ve only given it four stars instead of five. Still, it’s very well written and there’s a lot to love about it. Read it, especially if you’re curious about Paris of old.

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Thank you Net Galley and the publisher for an ARC opportunity.
As it was a pre-publication draft there were difficulties in reading as elements were misplaced. This did not detract unduly from the enjoyment of the read. Penney is an excellent storyteller and has researched her subject well.
The story is set in the siege of Paris during the Franco-Prussian war of 1870, the subsequent Commune and its brutal suppression by the Versaille based government.
We experience the privations of the population and how the managers of the Menagerie plan to enable as many animals as possibly to survive.
As to the humans, there are three main characters who are each misfits in various ways, but the real heroes are the working people of Paris who fight, suffer and survive - or die.

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Thanks to the author, the publisher and NetGalley for an ARC release of this book in return for an honest review.

The Beasts of Paris is an intriguing historical fiction story covering an interesting era of European history. It’s a nice story with a lot of characters that at some point I wasn’t sure how to focus on their adventures. It is obvious that the author has researched very well and the book contains very good and informative details. But what stopped me from finishing reading the book wasn’t just the number of characters and their different storylines; it was the fault in the print. I know it was just an ARC and not the finalized and published manuscript. But the font in NetGalley’s app was even smaller than a dictionary and in Kindle, it was a problem of several words typing together without any space between them and it made it really difficult to focus and read.
If given a more readable manuscript, I found the book intriguing enough to definitely finish reading it.
I don’t know if anyone else experienced the same issue with the font and typos or it was only the copy I received.

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I am not familiar with Stef Penney, but I am defiantly downloading one of her other epic novels as seemingly this is what she does best.

Set in Paris of the 1870s in the build up to the Franco-Prussian war there are numerous interconnecting characters who weave their way through the novel, but the three main are Anna, a former asylum patient, Ellis suffering from PTSD after his time as a surgeon in the American Civil War, an Lawrence a Canadian photographer.

Oh and Marguerite the noble tiger who resides in the Paris Menagerie and forms one of the Beasts of Paris of the title.

The novel is well researched, the horrors of the war and the Paris Commune set up in the aftermath – not a part of Parisian history I am familiar with. There are other characters in the novel who are equally as interesting, and they all weave in together and not everyone gets the happy ending that they deserve.

The Beasts of Paris as a five start treat – I read it almost in one sitting I was so engaged in it.

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This has an interesting cast of characters that carry the story along a nice pace and create depth to the story. Great plot and I found myself filling an afternoon reading this in one sitting as I found it so enjoyable. Thank you to Netgalley, the author and publisher for an advanced copy of the book in exchange for an honest , unbiased review. 4 stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

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Full disclosure: I love Stef Penney’s novels. She is not afraid to tackle big themes: artic exploration (‘Under a Polar Star’), the exploitation of murder and the search for a Native American culture in remote Canada ('The Tenderness of Wolves') …and now in something completely different the Siege of Paris in 1871 and its impact on the people and beasts within the confines of the city.

Like Donna Tartt’s once-a-decade output, each of Stef Penney’s novels is a rare treat and each tackles a completely different world. Here, I learnt much about the Siege of Paris and its aftermath, even more brutal, because it comprised French-on-French violence. We see the desperate failure of the ill-fated Paris Commune, a radical socialist government that actually gave women a voice (to a certain extent), in contrast to the French Revolution.

In case all this sounds rather heavy, the story is a ripping yarn of a city at war. A host of characters is brought to life and their stories interwoven: former asylum inmate Anne, tentatively making her way out in the world; Ellis, the army surgeon coming to terms with his sexuality, and drawn into the war despite himself; Victor, the assistant veterinarian at the Paris menagerie; and Lawrence, the photographer, another who has come to Paris to escape his background; as well as the believable minor characters, especially those who (wo)man the barricades. And then there are the beasts, all beautifully realised, so that we feel the power of the big cats pulsating off the page.

I highly recommend this novel. It’s historical fiction at its best.

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I had many moments when I thought I'm gonna cry because this book had so many sad details and a lot of bitter endings. I really enjoyed the historical event and at some point I liked only that as all of the characters didn't stayed with me as much as I wanted it.
The only characters I actually cared about and I was slightly invested in was Ellie and Lawrence love story. I liked the LGBT+ involvement and how accurate their story was to that time. But other than them I couldn't care less about the rest.
I didn't liked neither the fact that Victor went from one of the good guys to the bad guys for a whimp. And neither Anne's character didn't help me feel bad for Victor even if what he did was wrong. I don't know but I really couldn't vibe with her and I really liked Victor and I feel he suffered for the author to make a point which she wasn't obligated to do. The book had enough of points established and for once it wasn't necessary all that drama involving one of the most basic characters that I've seen in all my life.
But I was 100% invested in the plot and the drama and the war and historical elements involved. I found out so many new things I didn't knew before and I loved how vividly the descriptions were and how awful and sad that time was.
I didn't cried after all but I feel like my soul was dragged out by this book. I don't recommend it for people who are weak of heart as there are many scenes that will make you cry a river. So much death and despair and loneliness and I was 100% there for the animals.
I like how the title is the beast of Paris put it's not entirely about the animals and more about the beast on two legs that devastated a whole country.
I liked the ending a lot.

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Despite the historical information, I couldn't connect with this story at all. As soon as I was getting to know a little about one or two characters, it switched to someone else and none of them really came to life for me.

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I am not familiar with this period of history so I enjoyed learning about it. It was well-researched and well-written, with interesting, gripping characters.

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