Caroline Moorehead
Oncle Sam
Americans in Paris: Life and Death under Nazi Occupation 1940–44
By Charles Glass
HarperPress 528pp £20
When the Germans broke through the Maginot Line, in June 1940, and poured down through northern France, sending some 14 million terrified Dutch, Belgians and French onto the roads going south, many of pre-war Paris’s American residents were still living in the city. Some joined the exodus south and never went back. A few were taken prisoner. Others lay low and awaited events. And when the mayhem died down, 5,000 or so American citizens decided to remain in the city that they had made their home.
The Americans who now resolved to sit out the German occupation – in 1940 the US was not at war with Germany, and Paris had been declared an open city – were, as Charles Glass writes in Americans in Paris, ‘the most eccentric, original and disparate’ collection of
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