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Huguette

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In the lawlessness of post–World War II France, a resilient young woman fights to survive and make a living, no matter the cost—from the New York Times bestselling author of Three Hours in Paris and the Aimée Leduc series

After Libération, spring 1945: Seventeen-year-old Huguette Faure is a survivor. The war has taken everything from her—both her parents and her sense of safety. Now, pregnant and on the lam, she cannot return to her childhood home in Paris. Forced to reinvent herself, she must outrun her father’s enemies, who want her dead. After narrowly avoiding jail time—thanks to the help of a kindhearted police officer named Claude Leduc—Huguette lands a job assisting a legendary film director. As her role develops from helping him with chores to cooking his books, she sees an opportunity to break free from the ghosts of her past once and for all.

In this big-hearted story of resilience, New York Times bestselling author Cara Black offers a wholly original depiction of postwar France as well as introduces Claude Leduc—the man who decades later inspired his granddaughter, Aimée, to become a private investigator.

312 pages, Kindle Edition

Published December 2, 2025

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7977 people want to read

About the author

Cara Black

45 books1,356 followers
Cara Black frequents a Paris little known outside the beaten tourist track. A Paris she discovers on research trips and interviews with French police, private detectives and café owners. She lives in San Francisco with her husband, a bookseller, and their teenage son. She is a San Francisco Library Laureate and a member of the Paris Sociéte Historique in the Marais. Her nationally bestselling and award nominated Aimée Leduc Investigation series has been translated into French, Spanish, Italian, Japanese, German and Hebrew. She received the Medaille de la Ville de Paris for services to French culture. She's included in the GREAT WOMEN MYSTERY WRITERS by Elizabeth Lindsay 2nd editon published in the UK. Her first three novels in the series MURDER IN THE MARAIS, MURDER IN BELLEVILLE AN MURDER IN THE SENTIER - nominated for an Anthony Award as Best Novel - were published in the UK in 2008 and MURDER IN THE LATIN QUARTER comes out in the UK in 2010. Several of her books have been chosen as BookSense Picks and INDIE NEXT choice by the Amerian Association of Independent Bookstores. The Washington Post listed MURDER IN THE RUE DE PARADIS in the Best Fiction Choices of 2008. MURDER IN THE LATIN QUARTER is a finalist for Best Novel Award from the NCIBA Northern California Independent Booksellers Association.

She is currently working on the next book in the Aimée Leduc series.

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5 stars
55 (21%)
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107 (42%)
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71 (28%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 55 reviews
Profile Image for Kels.
24 reviews
October 5, 2025
This was my first giveaway win, and I enjoyed it! I was entertained by the shifts in environment and heartbreaking events. Claude’s discoveries were shocking, but I didn’t feel the chemistry between him and Huguette. The setting and tone felt authentic and well researched!
Profile Image for Ray Palen.
2,030 reviews56 followers
December 13, 2025
Things kick off in December 1947, with our heroine --- young Huguette Faure preparing to testify at a vital murder trial under the tutelage of Paris Detective Claude Leduc, whose specialty prior to this was missing persons. He happens to be the grandfather of Aimee Leduc, from author Cara Black’s long-running Paris mystery series and plays a huge role in this superb Historical Thriller entitled HUGUETTE.

The story takes a step back two- and one-half years earlier where a then seventeen-year-old Huguette is at a maternity hospital run by nuns on the outskirts of Sceaux where she has just given birth to a baby boy that she has consciously not named. This child was born out of hate instead of love when Huguette was raped by a German officer prior to her father being slain at their family business. Now, holding the child close to her, she realizes she does not wish to give it up for adoption. When that happens in spite of her wishes, she escapes the place and hunts down the family in possession of her baby, even though she has not the means or ability to raise him.

Upon Huguette discovering that the maternity hospital received payment for the adoption she makes it her business to get her baby back. Unfortunately, Huguette has found out in the past couple of years that disappointment and heartbreak seem to be her way of life, and she must leave her child behind. While at the local precinct, she is befriended by young officer Claude Leduc who sees to her release, mainly due to her youthful age. On her own, she attempts to gain much needed income by chasing down a man who still owed money to her father when he was alive. That man Enzo, instead of paying her, gets her work with a famous filmmaker named Monsieur Louis de Jouvenal. She makes herself valuable by using her creative accounting skills as she did with her father’s business and helps to ‘cook the books’ for Louis and keep his interests afloat.

For Huguette, her end game is to see her father vindicated and his killer ultimately brought to justice. A major step towards this goal takes place when an ageing and ill Louis buys a cinema for her to run and launder money through to get her the wealth she requires to make her revenge plan a reality. Along with working undercover for Claude Leduc to bring in some war profiteers in the post-liberation Paris, Huguette gets her taste of satisfaction that would have made her father proud. There are several roadblocks in the path of her success as well as more than a few individuals who wish to keep her down and possibly jailed, but with the assistance of Claude Leduc she works out a plan that will allow them both to have their day.

Claude has his own issues to overcome, not the least of which is a colleague named Beck who is a German national now living as a Parisian that he is unsure of and may not trust. This and the burgeoning feelings he has for young Huguette, even though he is married with a small family, troubles him to no end. Once he has the chance to solve a case involving three homicides, one of which being Huguette’s father, Claude sets aside the feelings of requiring a vendetta and instead sees his way towards justice being served.

The cover of HUGUETTE states that this is a novel of Liberation. I agree that this is historically correct, due to the post-war period it is set in. However, I found HUGUETTE to be more a novel of redemption, specifically for both Huguette Faure and Claude Leduc. Their fates are bound to the case that involves the brutal murder of her father during the war and their partnership in this novel is wonderful to see as the reader roots for justice to prevail. It was so great to spend time in the past with Aimee Leduc’s grandfather, and no one creates humanistic historical crime/mystery tales quite like Cara Black.

Reviewed by Ray Palen for Book Reporter
Profile Image for Ken Fredette.
1,197 reviews57 followers
June 20, 2025
I think Cara Black did an outstanding job of putting together who Huguette was to Claude Leduc. It was a really around about story which several scenarios put Huguette in different places at a time that the war was over. Including a movie studio, movie theaters, cafes, and black market rogues to name a few. She was left with a loss of her known father and also a German one eye man that raped her. But Claude Leduc seemed to rescue her and she found the German at a Movie Awards dinner and made him pay for seducing her against her will. We seem to wonder how Claude Leduc and Huguette make out after the story ends after all he has his son and his wife is with a different man.
216 reviews
January 25, 2026
I love most of Cara Blacks books. This one was no exception, except I wish she had filled in a little bit more. It jumped from one time to the next and I would’ve liked to know what happened during the interval. I recommend this book. Perhaps things will become clear if she writes a sequel.
Profile Image for Alex Long.
83 reviews
December 4, 2025
4 stars

Huguette is a woman-centered historical fiction novel following the challenging path of its titular character. Set in an era spanning the tail end of WWII, the Libération of France, and the years following the war, Huguette depicts a lot of heartbreak, pain, and suffering, as well as resilience, hope, and redemption.

The first third of the book had me captivated! I was fully bought into Hugette’s story, and my heart hurt for her. The middle and last thirds of the book, however, became muddled with tons of extraneous characters and convoluted subplots, some of which were never really tied up and frankly didn’t need to be part of the story in the first place. Some heavier editing could have helped the story’s pacing and clarity. While I felt some secondary characters and threads could have been dropped altogether, there were other plot lines that felt unresolved at the end and I found myself wishing for more closure.

The primary romantic liaison in this book so sorely lacked chemistry that I was a bit startled when they first became intimate, wondering if I’d somehow missed the signs that they were even attracted to each other. This ultimately weakened my fondness for the book, as I had a hard time rooting for the relationship when I just couldn’t see any of the development of their feelings for each other beyond the nature of the circumstances they’d been in together.

The writing was strong and beautifully paced, and the story well-researched. The audiobook narrator was phenomenal (except for the British accent she had to use briefly at the end which was…distracting). I’d love to read more from Cara Black in the future.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for this free ARC/ALC in exchange for my fair and honest review! Opinions are my own.💫
Profile Image for Katie.
557 reviews
December 24, 2025
Thank you NetGalley and RBMedia for the ARC of this audiobook.

This book was really difficult to get into and moved at a really slow pace. It started with me really not liking Huguette, and I'm still not sure what to think of her.

I typically like historical fictions, but this didn't have the depth and emotion that typically comes with the heavy times of the early 20th century.

Oh well, onto the next
Profile Image for Kathleen Freeman.
2,889 reviews55 followers
December 8, 2025
Set partially in 1945 Paris and 1947 Lyon this book deals with the aftermath of the liberation of Paris and the black market the permeated daily life. There is much to pull you into Huguette’s story while getting a peak into life in Paris once the Germans have retreated, this book is interesting and engaging.

This author knows how to write feisty women, Huguette is smart and quick thinking and doing what she needs to survive. This is a book I would recommend to anyone who likes historical fiction, feisty characters or Paris.

And the cover I love it, it is just beautiful.

I also need to highlight that Cara Black is one of those authors I really think is underhyped and underrated, while this book is standalone there is a tie to her Aimee Leduc series, if you like mysteries or like Paris I highly recommend this author’s Aimee Leduc series each book is set in a different part of Paris and is a roller coaster of action.
846 reviews1 follower
December 22, 2025
I enjoyed this book, don’t quite know how well it was written but the facts for the time were probably quite correct. Cara Black is a favorite author because her protagonist lived in Paris and I lived vicariously. This was more serious and quite frightening in the lights of after the war all the happenings etc.
Profile Image for Bookreporter.com Historical Fiction.
739 reviews42 followers
December 14, 2025
It’s December 1947, and Huguette Faure is preparing to testify at a murder trial under the tutelage of Detective Claude Leduc, whose specialty prior to this was missing persons. He happens to be the grandfather of Aimée Leduc, who stars in Cara Black’s long-running Paris mystery series, and plays a huge role in this superb thriller.

The story takes a step back two-and-a-half years earlier when 17-year-old Huguette is at a maternity hospital run by nuns on the outskirts of Sceaux, where she has just given birth to a baby boy who she has consciously not named. This child was born out of hate instead of love when Huguette was raped by a German officer prior to her father being slain at their family business. Now, holding the boy close to her, she realizes that she doesn't want to give him up for adoption. When that happens in spite of her wishes, she escapes and hunts down the family who has her baby, even though she doesn’t have the means or ability to raise him.

When Huguette discovers that the maternity hospital received payment for the adoption, she makes it her business to get her child back. Unfortunately, Huguette has found out in the past couple of years that disappointment and heartbreak seem to be her way of life, and she must leave him behind. While at the local precinct, she is befriended by young officer Claude Leduc, who sees to her release, mainly due to her youthful age.

On her own, Huguette attempts to gain much-needed income by chasing down a man who still owed money to her father when he was alive. But instead of paying her, he gets her work with famous filmmaker Louis de Jouvenal. She makes herself valuable by using her creative accounting skills as she did with her father’s business to help cook the books for Louis and keep his interests afloat.

For Huguette, her end game is to see her father vindicated and his killer brought to justice. A major step towards this goal takes place when an aging and ill Louis buys a cinema for her to run and launder money through to get her the wealth she requires to make her revenge plan a reality. Along with working undercover for Claude to bring in some war profiteers in post-liberation Paris, Huguette gets her taste of satisfaction that would have made her father proud. There are several roadblocks in the path to her success, as well as more than a few individuals who wish to keep her down and possibly jailed. But with Claude’s assistance, she works out a plan that will allow both of them to have their day.

Claude has his own issues to overcome, not the least of which is one of his colleagues. Beck is a German national now living as a Parisian, and Claude doesn’t know if he can trust him. This, and the burgeoning feelings he has for Huguette --- even though he is married with a small family --- troubles him to no end.

The cover of HUGUETTE states that it is a novel of liberation. This is historically accurate due to the post-war period in which it is set. However, I found the book to be more a novel of redemption, specifically for both Huguette and Claude. Their fates are bound to the case that involves the brutal murder of Huguette’s father, and their partnership is wonderful to see as the reader roots for justice to prevail.

It was so great to spend time with Aimée Leduc’s grandfather. No one creates humanistic historical crime/mystery tales quite like Cara Black.

Reviewed by Ray Palen
Profile Image for Bookreporter.com Mystery & Thriller.
2,661 reviews58.4k followers
December 14, 2025
It’s December 1947, and Huguette Faure is preparing to testify at a murder trial under the tutelage of Detective Claude Leduc, whose specialty prior to this was missing persons. He happens to be the grandfather of Aimée Leduc, who stars in Cara Black’s long-running Paris mystery series, and plays a huge role in this superb thriller.

The story takes a step back two-and-a-half years earlier when 17-year-old Huguette is at a maternity hospital run by nuns on the outskirts of Sceaux, where she has just given birth to a baby boy who she has consciously not named. This child was born out of hate instead of love when Huguette was raped by a German officer prior to her father being slain at their family business. Now, holding the boy close to her, she realizes that she doesn't want to give him up for adoption. When that happens in spite of her wishes, she escapes and hunts down the family who has her baby, even though she doesn’t have the means or ability to raise him.

When Huguette discovers that the maternity hospital received payment for the adoption, she makes it her business to get her child back. Unfortunately, Huguette has found out in the past couple of years that disappointment and heartbreak seem to be her way of life, and she must leave him behind. While at the local precinct, she is befriended by young officer Claude Leduc, who sees to her release, mainly due to her youthful age.

On her own, Huguette attempts to gain much-needed income by chasing down a man who still owed money to her father when he was alive. But instead of paying her, he gets her work with famous filmmaker Louis de Jouvenal. She makes herself valuable by using her creative accounting skills as she did with her father’s business to help cook the books for Louis and keep his interests afloat.

For Huguette, her end game is to see her father vindicated and his killer brought to justice. A major step towards this goal takes place when an aging and ill Louis buys a cinema for her to run and launder money through to get her the wealth she requires to make her revenge plan a reality. Along with working undercover for Claude to bring in some war profiteers in post-liberation Paris, Huguette gets her taste of satisfaction that would have made her father proud. There are several roadblocks in the path to her success, as well as more than a few individuals who wish to keep her down and possibly jailed. But with Claude’s assistance, she works out a plan that will allow both of them to have their day.

Claude has his own issues to overcome, not the least of which is one of his colleagues. Beck is a German national now living as a Parisian, and Claude doesn’t know if he can trust him. This, and the burgeoning feelings he has for Huguette --- even though he is married with a small family --- troubles him to no end.

The cover of HUGUETTE states that it is a novel of liberation. This is historically accurate due to the post-war period in which it is set. However, I found the book to be more a novel of redemption, specifically for both Huguette and Claude. Their fates are bound to the case that involves the brutal murder of Huguette’s father, and their partnership is wonderful to see as the reader roots for justice to prevail.

It was so great to spend time with Aimée Leduc’s grandfather. No one creates humanistic historical crime/mystery tales quite like Cara Black.

Reviewed by Ray Palen
Profile Image for Robin.
586 reviews73 followers
August 29, 2025
I was very eagerly awaiting this book, which marries Cara Black’s interest in Paris and WWII with a great female central character. Black has made her name with her Aimée Leduc books. Aimée is a private detective in 1990’s Paris – this book takes us back to the war and there we discover, along with the titular character, the character of Aimée’s grandfather Claude, founder of the Leduc Detective Agency. When the book opens, though, Claude is a policeman, or flic, and he’s trying to stay employed.

The story is mostly Huguette’s, however. As the book begins in 1945 Paris, her story is not a happy one. She’s lost both parents – her father was a collaborator – and she’s pregnant. She’s living in a maternity home with the understanding that when the baby is born she will relinquish it to “suitable” parents. She’s only 17 with no way to care for a baby. When it’s born during a storm, she’s forced to nurse and care for him for a week or so and of course she begins to love him.

This complicates things when the baby is removed and Huguette heads off to search for him. While the search does not go well, Huguette is a survivor. She’s smart and good with numbers and she stumbles into a black market situation at a movie studio. She starts as a kind of under assistant to an assistant and because of her intelligence works her way up.

She is governed by two things: she wants justice for her father, who was killed during liberation, and she wants punishment for the Nazi that raped her and made her pregnant. She’s also afraid of retribution and ultimately is able to change her name and live in Lyon mostly undetected.

Black’s real genius here is not only the personality of Huguette, who is strong but full of doubt and trauma, but her portrayal of postwar France. The uncertainty of who is tainted with a whiff of collaboration; the fate of the Nazis detained in camps, awaiting trial for their crimes; the sound of wooden soles on cobblestone streets – there was no leather for shoes in postwar France; the patched up German bullet holes in cafés rebuilding after the war. It’s very much a portrait of a society reassembling itself.

That includes Huguette, of course. She never forgets when she was homeless and hungry in a police station. At that moment, Claude saved her from jail and instead finds her a job. She tries to pay it forward as she becomes successful and employs those who truly need a hand. Black is not a sentimental writer in any way, however, and her portrayal of the horrors Huguette endures and the aftermath of those horrors is straightforward, somehow making Hugeutte’s trials all the more poignant and memorable. Black is also highlighting the trials of France as it rebuilds and begins to assimilate the trauma the Nazis inflicted on the French people.

The meetings between Claude and Huguette – spaced through the book – are like the checkpoints of the story and make good bookends for the saga of Huguette.

282 reviews10 followers
December 24, 2025
Huguette by Cara Black is a novel that does not ask for your attention—it claims it. This is a story carved from hunger, fear, and endurance, told through the life of a young woman who survives what should have broken her and emerges not unscathed, but unbowed.
Huguette’s world is post-war France: shattered, morally compromised, and still dangerous long after Liberation. Orphaned, pregnant, betrayed, and hunted by systems designed to erase women like her, she learns quickly that survival is an act of constant reinvention. She moves through forests and confessional boxes, black markets and prison cells, assuming new names and faces, burying secrets as deftly as contraband. To call her “resilient” feels insufficient—Huguette is forged. She adapts not because she wants to be strong, but because weakness is not an option afforded to her.
Black’s prose moves like memory itself—folding backward and forward in time, revealing truth in layers. The structure mirrors trauma: fragmented, circular, relentless. Each return to the past tightens the present, until justice, long delayed, finally surfaces. The historical detail is vivid and unflinching: the cruelty of Nazi occupation, the moral rot of collaboration, the continued menace of the black market, and the hollow promise of safety after the war ends. Freedom, here, is complicated. Survival always comes at a cost.
What makes Huguette extraordinary is its emotional gravity. This is not a story that flinches from brutality—sexual violence, poverty, incarceration, betrayal—but it never exploits them. Instead, it honors the lived reality of women who endured the unendurable. Huguette is flawed, guarded, and often alone, yet her intelligence and will radiate through every page. She does not wait to be saved. She builds a future with her own hands, even as the past hunts her.
This novel is both intimate and expansive: a portrait of one woman’s valor set against the moral wreckage of a nation rebuilding itself. By the final pages, Huguette feels less like a character and more like a testament—to survival, to reinvention, to the quiet ferocity of women history tries to forget.
This is a book to savor, to sit with, to feel in your bones. Huguette is devastating, immersive, and unforgettable—and easily one of Cara Black’s finest works.
Profile Image for JerrieGayle.
234 reviews5 followers
December 17, 2025
Thoughtful but Inconsistent WWII Historical Fiction

This standalone historical fiction novel is set during the final year of World War II and the uncertain years that follow. Told in third person from Huguette’s perspective, the story alternates between past and present, opening in 1947 as Huguette faces an event that forces her to confront painful memories of life in Nazi-occupied France.

At seventeen, Huguette is orphaned by a Nazi collaborator and facing an unwanted pregnancy, believing that once her child is born, her life will somehow become easier. Instead, she comes of age in post-war France—a time marked by scarcity, instability, and danger, particularly for a young woman completely on her own. In order to survive, she turns to the black market, a risky choice that eventually leads her into a very dangerous situation. She turns to a French policeman who once showed her a moment of unexpected compassion, and he gives her the resolve to keep going. Through her father’s connections, she later finds work in the film industry. Despite her past continuing to shadow her, Huguette manages to build a successful future and considerable financial security.

Cara Black vividly captures the devastation and hardship of life during and after the war, and those harsh realities make Huguette feel far older than her years. However, her ability to overcome so many obstacles with little to no sustained support makes some of her achievements—particularly at such a young age—feel somewhat unrealistic. The limited depth given to both the main character and the supporting cast also makes it harder to fully connect with or sympathize with them during such an emotionally charged historical period.

The audiobook narration is a strong point. The narrator handles the multiple accents well, and her pronunciation of French words adds authenticity and enhances the listening experience.

Thank you to NetGalley and Recorded Books for providing this audiobook for review. All opinions are my own and based on an advanced listener copy, which may differ from the final published version.
1,796 reviews34 followers
December 28, 2025
August, 1945: Badly traumatized by the last few months of Nazi occupation, orphaned, and pregnant through a story too painful and dangerous to tell, seventeen-year-old Huguette Faure seeks refuge at a convent. Her father, before he was killed by vigilantes, made powerful enemies, and Huguette has a target on her back. But not even when her baby is born does she find peace—and after narrowly avoiding jail time thanks to the kindness of a Parisian police officer, though she feels ready to give up, she instead decides to try for one last chance for a new life. She cashes in one of her father’s IOUs at a film studio on the outskirts of Paris, where she gets a job assisting a legendary film director. Once she goes from helping him with chores to cooking his books, she sees an opportunity to change her fortunes—and to break free from the ghosts of her past once and for all.

Over the next few years of Huguette’s life, she goes from the black market to the film industry, from Paris to Lyon, from child to woman. National and New York Times bestseller Cara Black has been an expert in all things France for decades; now, in her most expansive, emotional work yet, she uses the vessel of Huguette, this enterprising and complex young heroine, to immerse readers in the harsh reality of life after Libération.
181 reviews6 followers
November 21, 2025
Thanks to Netgalley for providing an ARC to me. All opinions are my own. To begin, I've read and loved all of Cara Black's novels. Unfortunately, this one fell flat. The outline of the story which begins as the liberation of France rages at the end of WWII. Huguette is a 17 year old girl living with her dad over the cafe he runs. Her mom is deceased. Like many during those difficult times, her dad engaged in laundering black market goods. Both he and Huguette are considered enemies of the resistance movement. The resistance is searching for "collaborators" to mete out retribution. Huguette also has a violent encounter with a Nazi and finds herself pregnant. This novel is a journey over the next five years of Huguette's life as she searches for safety and an identity, while trying to come to terms with loss, betrayal and fear for her life, more than any young girl should have to deal with. While the author has good intentions for this plot, it's convuluted and hard to decipher, especially the parts that deal with the operations of the black market in post-war France. As in all Ms. Black's books, France is a character in the book and it adds atmosphere to the plot. While I recommend this book, it's with some reservation.
Profile Image for Carla Thomas.
417 reviews2 followers
January 1, 2026
Rounded up to 4 stars. This was an interesting listen about post-Liberation France and the reality of life during that timeframe and in the last days of WWII...dealing on the black market during and post war, Nazi collaborators and post war treatment of those individuals and so much more. Huguette, a young teen during this time has to deal with being raped by a German officer and becoming impregnated by him, then dealing with the death of her father at the hands of people who turned on him at the end of the war...she manages to survive, despite a target on her own back, thanks to the kindness of a Parisian police officer. She uses one of her father's IOUs at a film studio outside Paris and gets a job helping a legendary film director with chores to "cooking his books" as she used to do for her fahter. While learning the ropes of the film industry, she sees an opportunity to change her fortunes and to break free of the ghosts haunting her past by vindicating her father, finding his killer and seeing him brought to justice, along with hunting down the Nazi who raped her. Along the way, fate reunites her with Claude Leduc, the kind police officer who helped her escape her initial troubles. Their partnership will have you rooting for justice to prevail...
Profile Image for Marcia.
155 reviews2 followers
January 5, 2026
This book was a bit different from the other books in the Aimee Leduc series. The book begins in December 1947 as WWII is drawing to a close. German soldiers including the Gestopo are still occupying Paris. Huguette lives with her father above the cafe they run. Her father is involved in moving black market goods, anything from butter to rum. And in all this he is collaborating with the Nazis. He involves his teenage daughter by having her cook the books. A high ranking nazi threatens him with exposure if he does not consent to allowing him access to his daughter for the evening. That evening she is taken to a party where she is announced as the guest of honor- a catholic school girl virgin. She is furious at her father for the ultimate betrayal and her public humiliation. Days later Paris is liberated and her father killed. As a 17 year old orphan, huguette is sent to a home for unwed mothers, really a workhouse. After her baby is born and sold, she tracks the couple as they are about to board a train. After confronting them, she is arrested for disturbing the peace. It is at the police station that she meets Claude Leduc, a young detective investigating the murder of her father. Thus begins the back story that will culminate with the current day Aimee Leduc series.
Profile Image for Mystica.
1,775 reviews33 followers
January 17, 2026
Post 1945 Paris the story of Huegette is very disturbing. Just seventeen, orphaned and betrayed by her father, she now finds herself pregnant with a Nazi officers baby and forced by the nuns to give him up for adoption.

Using one of her father’s contacts she gets an entry level job into one of the Parisian studios, climbing the ladder slowly with her business acumen and shrewd and quick thinking. Unimaginable life for a young woman with no family or friends her focus is on finding the Nazi officer who raped her on a whim. Hearing tales that the officer escaped and some stories that he died, she finally meets him at a film award ceremony to seek the revenge she had been pursuing for most of her life. Her relationship with Claude Leduce did not impose much on the story as there was so much going on as well. Leduce seemed secondary.

The emotional intensity in this story is hard to read clinically. Huguette’s child conceived in rape but when he was born she had no choice in the plan for his adoption, and she longed to get him back. This was not to be. Her life was never easy because she was a target by her father’s enemies but Huguette was a very strong, gutsy focussed woman.

Overwhelmingly sad but very real about 1945 to 1947 Paris.
Profile Image for Lupita_333.
261 reviews13 followers
September 29, 2025
Emotional story with a very strong woman lead character. The story follows Huguette as she goes through many tragic events in her life including being sexually assaulted and having to give up her baby at only 17 years old. The SA isn’t detailed on page but it does discuss the events leading up to it and the aftermath. Huguette’s strength and bravery shine through as she runs from her past to make a better life for herself.

I liked how the setting heavily focuses on the after effects of the war in France. I really enjoyed the constant change in scenery from the jobs that Huguette took on as the story progressed.

The story also follows Claude as he investigated various connected murders. One of the victims was the father of Huguette. I liked seeing him link the murders and his determination to figure out who was responsible. I was shocked at who her father’s murderer was.

The romance that Huguette was involved in towards the end felt unnecessary. The story had some unrealistic scenes. I didn’t like the writing style. My first book by this author.

Thank you NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for PeggySue.
391 reviews9 followers
December 14, 2025
Huguette by Cara Black
Narrator, Carine Montbertrand
This was a no holds barred look at post war France which was often not a pretty sight for several reasons. Huguette was a strong character who managed by any means necessary to eventually raise herself up to being the head of a film studio. Her background was hair raising and sad. There is a scene of sexual assault that is not explicit but is still very disturbing. Frequently the story is very tense and suspenseful. Some scenes are pretty gruesome. There is a slightly odd change of scene at 80% but then a return to the previous location. It had to happen for Huguette to learn some difficult information but it was still strange. The romantic interludes, if you can call them that, did not amount to much. However, we were introduced to the grandfather and father of Aimee Leduc which was interesting. There are a couple of twists at the end.
The narrator was very good except for her supposed Cockney accent towards the end. That was painful.
Thanks to NetGalley
Profile Image for Jill.
350 reviews5 followers
October 7, 2025
An unforgettable and memorable novel set in France towards the end of WW2, of a young girl’s strength and resilience to make a better life for herself. The secrets of the underworld of the black market, corruption, murders and gangs in Paris emerge. Used as fodder Huguette was raped as a young girl, and shortly after the birth, her son adopted. The author created some great characters, not all likeable, but this added to the complexities of the story. I was fascinated by how easily Huguette was able to take on different guises and name changes to enable her to succeed. The storyline initially was slightly confused but over time the direction became clear and the surprises in store make for an intriguing novel.

My thanks to NetGalley and the publishers Soho Press for granting me the opportunity to read and review this ARC.
Profile Image for Deb.
591 reviews8 followers
October 26, 2025
It was easy to get caught up in this story of survival and ultimately triumph as a young women deals with the aftermath of family secrets in post WWII France. Huguette was cruelly used by her father during the war, forced to go to a party where she was molested. Then she finds herself pregnant and is sent to a home for unwed mothers. Forced to give up her baby and then wondering what happened to her father and her friend, who both are found dead in the river, Huguette starts a journey where she is forced to become a deceiver in order to uncover the secrets and stay safe. It is not a life that she chose, but she learns what she needs to in order to survive, as as the secret gradually unfold so too does a satisfying story with memorable characters. Definitely a solid read for fans of historical fiction with strong female lead characters, and plenty of intrigue.
Profile Image for Helen H.
175 reviews10 followers
December 5, 2025
Huguette is an extremely intelligent, strong woman. To describe her as ‘resilient’ feels like an understatement. She endures betrayal of the worst kind; she can trust no one and her experiences are more than any young woman should have to face.

The author portrays post-war France with such discernment and accuracy. A country striving to rebuild following Nazi occupation. The mess and the menace of the black market continuing after Liberation. Everyone doing what they must to survive.

This is a story of two people reinventing themselves after the war; Huguette doing so to survive, and her worst enemy doing so to cover up war crimes.

Huguette’s story is brutal and complex; making this a tense, immersive read.
Profile Image for Miriam Kahn.
2,196 reviews74 followers
December 18, 2025
Set in the years after WWII in France, Huguette continues to fight for justice, to be part of the resistance and the black market as she tries to get her life back on an even keel.

This book is a decided departure from Cara Black’s intense thrillers, especially the ones that span a day or a few hours. This one pokes along, shifting time between 1944/45 and 1947, and changing perspective. The tension might be present if read in one long gulp. In reality, it’s a leisurely tale that ends with a sigh instead of a great, thumping wow!

Thanks to the publisher, Soho Crime https://sohopress.com/ for an ARC to read and review.
Profile Image for Tia.
33 reviews2 followers
January 2, 2026
Was a good book

Hugette Faure was seventeen when she first crossed paths with Claude LeDuc, soon after the liberation of Paris in August, 1944. He found her sobbing on the floor at his police station. That night he saved her from prison and gave her the start to a new life. They would meet many times over the next decade, building an unlikely friendship.
The post-war years were hard in France, but Hugette was determined to survive, and even to thrive. With her intelligence, strength of character, perseverance, and a little help from her friends, she rose above almost unsurmountable odds.
Profile Image for Dana.
416 reviews14 followers
December 30, 2025
I did not enjoy this nearly as much as I wanted to. The story would have benefited from focusing on one or two plot points. It felt more like Black wanted to see what would stick and so everything got thrown in and given a surface treatment. Add to that the fact that I did not find Huguette (or Claude for that matter) a very sympathetic or likeable character, and it became less interesting to read.
Profile Image for Mary.
1,588 reviews20 followers
January 5, 2026
WWII - after the Liberation - how does a young woman who did the books for her father survive his/her enemies. Her parents are dead, she's 17, her baby has been sold, people are after her. She finds "safety". She learns the business of movies, from a legendary film maker, still able to fix the books as needed she creates a new world for herself. Yet, she still is not safe until the truth comes out! Hard to put this book down!
142 reviews
January 7, 2026
I received a pre publication audio book of Huguette fro Net Galley and found it compelling. A complicated murder mystery with a clever twist at the end. There was a lot of information about collaborators and witch hunts after World War 11. There were also interesting insights into the corruption and nepotism that followed Liberation and Peace. The narrator did a great job playing a cockney to Germans to French citizens.
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