
33 Place Brugmann
33 Place Brugmann ~ Alice Austin
It is August, 1939, in a wealthy Brussels neighborhood. The residents of a prosperous apartment building include a Jewish art dealer, Leo Raphael, his wife Sophia, and their children, Julian and Esther; an architect, Francois Sauvin and his art student daughter, Charlotte; an army colonel; a lawyer; a seamstress; a notary; and a few other well-to-do tenants.
The art dealer and his family emigrate to England, where Julian joins the Royal Air Force, and Esther becomes a war nurse. The remaining residents stay in Brussels and have to find their way under the increasing limitations and dangers of Nazi occupation. The story unfolds in the voice of the different characters, so we get each of their points of view. Charlotte describes the occupation: “The occupation of Brussels was immediate, but the constraints – the impositions, the curfews, the ostracizing, the marking, the bans, the roundups, the deportations, the murders – these happened so gradually they might be called cunning, for just as you got used to one thing, there was another.”
As the book goes on and we switch perspectives, we come to see how each character copes with the increasing danger, with the deprivation and hunger of food rations, with the fear of loss, and with the distrust of neighbors and friends, as self preservation and loyalty are shown in stark relief.
I liked this book a lot, and found its lessons to be timely as our world once again teeters toward authoritarian leaders. I listened to the audiobook, which was narrated by different actors for each character. Highly recommended.

17 Comments
Ally Bean
Sounds like a great story that would draw me in instantly. WWII stories seem meaningful in new ways lately.
J
Depressingly, yes.
Paola
I’ve literally just bought this book. Looking forward to reading it.
J
Paola, I didn’t know you still read my blog! YAY! I hope you enjoy the book. Since you live there, you can go visit the street and tell us what it’s like.
Paola
Will do!
Elisabeth
I just went to put it on hold at the library and it’s available!!!
J
Oh, nice! I hope you enjoy it.
Ernie
This sounds like it is right up my alley. Adding it to my list. Thanks for sharing.
J
You’re welcome, I hope you enjoy it!
Margaret
I would love a book related to Belgium; there are so few of them.
J
I hope you like it if you give it a try.
PocoBrat
What an eerily apropos book for our times!
J
Yeah, BAH HUMBUG to that sad reality, right?
NGS
Listening to the audiobook when there are so many characters is a good idea! I hated reading the plot summary, though. Did you see the news about how Oklahoma has education standards that require teaching that the 2020 election results had discrepencies? Oh, Trump lies and now we’re teaching those lies to children? George Orwell is sitting up in his grave and taking notice.
J
Regarding OK – ARGGGH!
Regarding listening, yes, it was definitely helpful. I do wonder why they don’t trust us with French or Belgian accents though? Maybe people wouldn’t understand them? OK, I’ll be honest, I wouldn’t probably struggle and have to give up. So I guess it’s best that they used British actors.
Nicole MacPherson
Someone mentioned this a while ago and I put it on hold…I’m still in the queue but closer to the top! Who mentioned this to me? Hang on, let me check.
JULIE IT WAS YOU. Well, that was a surprise! I will let you know when it comes in!
J
LOL, yeah, at least I’m consistent! It was a book I saw at a bookstore and thought looked interesting but was too cheap to purchase.