Luxe Beat Magazine NOVEMBER 2014 | Page 103

Book Review Parisian Promises by Cecilia Velástegui By John E. Roper "She'd learned from witnessing her mother's beatings that it was best to agree with every accusation and to apologize for any perceived crimes. Otherwise things only got worse." T he romantic movies Hollywood produced in the middle of the twentieth century forever warped America’s perception of Europe. Additionally, photojournalist Robert Doisneau contributed to the mythos with his black-and-white shots that captured only select aspects of Parisian life. His famous Le baiser de l’hotel de ville (Kiss by the Town Hall) of 1950 only enhanced the French capital’s reputation as “The City of Love.” But what the starry-eyed travelers from the U.S. during the late 60s and early 70s were often unaware of was that the social turbulence that was shaking up America during the time period was also reverberating in places like France as well, and that life beyond the facades of the tourist traps was often anything but romantic. Award-winning author Cecilia Velástegui turns her attention in her latest novel to the years shortly after the Paris student riots of 1968 and to a time when the civil unrest that led to the violence still simmers. It is 1973, and Monica, Lola, Karen, and Annie, four young coeds from America, have come ostensibly to study for a year in France. However, like countless exchange students before them, they also dream of new adventures, new lives, and perhaps a chance at true love. Monica, F