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Rendezvous

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Told consistently through the unsophisticated eyes of a French peasant girl, she has painted a knowing portrait of a particularized locale with human denominators of universal identification. Every the faraway little town in Connecticut comes alive with a subtle magic of evocation. Miss Franken is never guilty of writing with a message, and yet her plays and novels carry a deeper impact than the outward story.

For more than two thousand years in the village of Eze, perched high on the hills above the Mediterranean has not been inviolate from invasion.

251 pages, Unknown Binding

Published January 1, 1954

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About the author

Rose Franken

60 books8 followers
Rose Dorothy Lewin Franken was born on December 28th 1895, in Gainesville, Texas and was one of the most popular and influential Jewish woman writers of her day. She was a celebrated Broadway playwright and director, a Hollywood screenwriter and a popular novelist whose fiction touched a sympathetic chord in American women. Franken's work reflects her personal struggle with traditional gender roles and her ambivalence about balancing domestic and career commitments.

Novelist and short story writer Rose Franken crossed over into the theater with the surprise hit of her play Another Language in 1932. Her sharp-eyed observations about the American family gave tang to her domestic dramas Claudia (1941) and The Hallams (1947). Social concerns such as antisemitism, homophobia, sexism, and war fueled her other plays such as Outrageous Fortune (1943), Doctors Disagree (1943), and Soldier’s Wife (1944).

Franken was married to William Brown Meloney who helped bring the Claudia stories to the radio. They had three sons.

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Profile Image for Samantha Glasser.
1,803 reviews72 followers
April 20, 2026
Chapter one is masterfully written, creating a picture of a town and the many people living there and the ways they're interconnected in an absorbing way. It is indicative of the skill of the rest of the writing.

The book follows Josephine, a young French girl who gets the opportunity to work as a nanny to an American family and their children. Although it is a hardship for her family to lose her in their pastry shop, they make the sacrifice to give her the opportunity. When the job ends, she comes home with plans to marry her childhood sweetheart, to meet her brother’s new wife, and to settle back in with her parents. Things don’t go entirely as planned. Her mother hates Pierre’s wife, a German girl he met during his military service. Josephine does her best to give her the benefit of the doubt, but she proves time and time again to be deceitful and averse to housewifery.

The book ends in a melancholy way that sticks with you. For a book that has been completely forgotten in the internet age (I had to add it to Goodreads), it holds up very well.

“One does not learn to use one’s mind and heart without living. And reading is a poor substitute for living.”
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