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Book Review of The Paris Apartment by Lucy FoleyThe Paris Apartment is a well-named psychological thriller - the focus of the action is almost entirely within a single apartment inhabited by the dysfunctional Meunier family. The reader is introduced to them when Jess turns up to meet her brother Ben, only to find that he has gone missing. The story is part who-dunnit and part why-did-they-dunnit with the various twists and turns of plot, that you'd expect of a thriller. The reader is invited into a world of subterfuge, lies and deception where very little is as it originally seems. Sophie, the elegant and sophisticated step-mum chooses to hide her origins, and the concierge, also has plenty of reasons to be hesitant about revealing who she really is. The characters in the Meunier family are all caught up in the life of Ben, a charming, if somewhat disingenuous, journalist. They all have a different reason to slowly realise that they'd rather Ben wasn't in the apartment that his friend Nick, son of the bully Jacques Meunier, had invited him to live in. Jess, his sister, is repeatedly warned to leave things well alone, but determined to discover what has happened to her brother, she refuses, despite the danger this frequently puts her in. Book Club Questions on Lucy Foley's The Paris Apartment
Book Club Questions on The Paris Apartment (if you haven't read the book!)
Personal Response to The Paris Apartment by Lucy FoleyStylistically, Lucy Foley's The Paris Apartment reminded me very much of Lisa Jewell's The Family Upstairs. There are even similarities in plot structrure and both Lisa Jewell and Lucy Foley wrote sequels to their novels where we learn more about the protagonists. Although I don't read many thrillers, The Paris Apartment did what it advertised on the tin. It was an interesting page-turner, with manageable short chapters, making it, in my view, a quick and fun holiday read.
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