The Vanished Collection: a few happy reviews
Happy reviews for
The Vanished Collection
(nonfiction/memoir)
Translated from the French by Natasha Lehrer
La Collection disparue
was first published in French on 9/9/2020
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256 pages
Paperback and ebook
New Vessel Press
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KAREN wrote:
The Vanished Collection is a wonderful tribute to the authorâs great-grandfather, renowned collector of Impressionist art, Jules Strauss. It is also a tribute to perseverance and dedication to researching the truth.
I found the authorâs recounting of her experiences easy-to-read and absolutely fascinating. I was so caught up in her story that time flew by. I was immersed in her search…
Also, the story is a heartbreaking, sobering reminder of the Jews who lost everything: their property, possessions, families, and lives. I hope this book spurs other descendants to question what family treasures may be locked away in some museum, safe yet forgotten. I know that I want to read more about this topic now.
Read her full review here
KRISTINE wrote:
When I read the premise of The Vanished Collection by Pauline Baer de Perignon, I was immediately enticed to read it. Even the cover blurb promised a nonfiction story that would read like fiction with elements of intrigue and mystery as the author researched and uncovered long-buried family secrets. Did the Nazis seize her Jewish great-grandfatherâs art collection?…
The Vanished Collection is an engaging book, easily read in one sitting, but whose story lingers long after the final pages are turned. The authorâs journey into the past, along with her unexpected journey of self-discovery into the present, create a not-to-be-missed story.
Read her full review here
LILIANNE wrote:
Reading The Vanished Collection is like having a front row seat to Pauline Baer de Perignonâs internal discourse. We are privy to the insecurities, secret ambitions, triumphs and disappointments that she experiences as she embarks on a journey to uncover a particularly distressing chapter in her familyâs history….
I particularly liked the significance that the author lends to seemingly insignificant encounters, snippets of conversation and serendipitous moments that together helped her piece together at least a part of the mystery of her great-grandfatherâs art collection.Â
Read her full review here
PAULITA wrote:
Having researched the topic of stolen art during World War II for my novel The Summer of France,
I was already enthralled by the idea of looking back at undiscovered thefts by the Nazis and the effort it takes to try to redeem the crimes committed in the 1940s. This book was set within the past five years.
I enjoyed The Vanished Collection and the peek into the French mind, where no one wanted to discuss the atrocities of the Nazis during the war, preferring not to remember that neighbor turned against neighbor.
Read her full review here
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SYNOPSIS
It all started with a list of paintings.
There, scribbled by a cousin she hadnât seen for years, were the names of the masters whose works once belonged to her great-grandfather, Jules Strauss: Renoir, Monet, Degas, Tiepolo and more.
Pauline Baer de Perignon knew little to nothing about Strauss, or about his vanished, precious art collection. But the list drove her on a frenzied trail of research in the archives of the Louvre and the Dresden museums, through Gestapo records, and to consult with Nobel laureate Patrick Modiano.
What happened in 1942? And what became of the collection after Nazis seized her great-grandparentsâ elegant Parisian apartment?
The quest takes Pauline Baer de Perignon from the Occupation of France to the present day as she breaks the silence around the wrenching experiences her family never fully transmitted, and asks what art itself is capable of conveying over time.
PRAISE FOR THE VANISHED COLLECTION
âRiveting ⊠This page-turner will delight art history and mystery fans alike.â âPublishers Weekly
âUndeniably intriguing ⊠memorable and often moving. A fascinating journey to uncover lost family secretsâand treasure.â â Kirkus Reviews
âAs devourable as a thriller⊠Incredibly moving.â âElle
âA terrific book.â âLe Point
âStimulated by a desire to write, Pauline unconsciously understands that what she really wants is to bear witness. As if in a Kubrick film, she opens a door and a river of blood pours out on her. With valued assistance from Modiano, Pauline digs into this shocking story that amazes and breaks the heart ⊠transforming an unfortunately commonplace account of paintings stolen by the Nazis into a breathtaking novel of suspense.â âLe Figaro
âA charmingly told account of a womanâs quest to reconstruct her great-grandfatherâs art collection… Profound and touching.â âLynn H. Nicholas, author of The Rape of Europa
âPauline Baer de Perignon is a natural storytellerârefreshingly honest, curious and open. Like the best memoirists, she manages to tell multiple stories simultaneously, to delicately layer meanings and narratives. Here is not only a riveting art world mystery, but an utterly personal, heartfelt, and extremely intelligent story of a woman doing everything she can to uncover the truths of her family.â âMenachem Kaiser, author of Plunder: A Memoir of Family Property and Nazi Treasure
âBeautifully evokes a vanished world that once stood at the crossroads between the heights of civilization and the depths of barbarism before being overwhelmed by the latter. The restitution to Pauline Baer de Perignon’s family of one of Franceâs finest 18th-century masterpieces, through a harrowing process dramatically recounted in this book, goes some way to redeem the cause of civilization.â âJames Gardner, author of The Louvre: The Many Lives of the Worldâs Most Famous Museum
âFor decades the lost Jules Strauss collection lay shrouded in mystery. First the Nazi expropriation, followed by the familyâs own denial. Finally through determination a great-granddaughter is able to piece together previously buried clues. Pauline Baerâs goal is justice, but an unexpected consequence is a poignant connection with lost family and a keener understanding of history.â â Simon Goodman, author of The Orpheus Clock: The Search for My Familyâs Art Treasures Stolen by the Nazis
ââEvery family has its paradise lost,â writes Pauline Baer de Perignon. Like the Camondos, the Rothschilds, the Ephrussis and other Jewish families whose art was looted in the war, her heritage is of epic proportions and this account of that past resurfacing today is as moving as it is fascinating. I could not put it down.â âCĂ©cile David-Weill, author of Parents Under the Influence and The SuitorsÂ
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Pauline Baer de Perignon
has co-authored film scripts
and directed writing workshops in Paris
where she lives.
The Vanished Collection is her first book.