This book was the base text of one of my favourite films, "Une Monde Presque Paisible" (Almost Peaceful). I had seen it several times before realising there was a book, which I bought forthwith and devoured in two days. Reading it brought the film alive and made certain things about it clearer to me. The story of a group of people, mostly Jews who have survived WW2 and returned to Paris to work in M. Albert's tailoring shop, each chapter is told from a different person's perspective: the machinist, the presser, the tailor's wife, the rather useless apprentice who is "too smart" to be a good tailor. Poor Joseph reminded me of my own vain efforts to learn tailoring; I could have learned if they had been as patient as M. Albert, but they decided that a) I was foreign, and b) I had too many "book-smarts" to bother with.
The language is deceptively simple; students of French will be able to read the words--whether or not you catch and hold onto the underlying ideas is another matter. Like little Betty, I'm not sure I understood the end of the story entirely, but this is one of those books that repays multiple readings, particularly if you have seen the film. The film is one of the few that does no disservice to the book; some unnecessary characters were cut, and some events telescoped, but in a way that avoids confusion for the viewer while respecting the base text. Perhaps, like Madame Andrée, there are things I don't get because I'm not Jewish. I don't mind. As M. Albert says, "Peut-être qu'a force d'être parmi nous, ça viendra."