The Blood of Lorraine

The Blood of Lorraine, the second crime novel by Barbara Corrado Pope, is set in France during the Belle Époque.[1]

Critical reception

Critics have reviewed The Blood of Lorraine favorably. Deborah Schoeneman of the Jewish Book Council wrote it is " a fascinating read, exploring religious, social, and political thinking, propaganda, and prejudice".[2] Kirkus review reported it "gracefully transports the reader to its liveried era and broadens the story’s appeal with characters of substance and depth".[3] Publisher's Weekly concluded, "Pope, a historian, more than compensates for a not fully satisfying ending with a complex lead and the skill with which she makes the anti-Semitic atmosphere of the times both palpable and tragically prophetic."[4]

gollark: I should really restart my GPT-chatbot project thing from ages ago.
gollark: I mean, you can, but it would be wrong, making you a wrong person.
gollark: You can't really accuse someone of being an AI because of poor grammar.
gollark: Language models can generally manage basically-perfect grammar/syntax nowadays, but just fail at maintaining meaning.
gollark: It would?

See also

References

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