Tuesday, December 2, 2025

But Who Is She? a guest post by Cara Black

 LUCY BURDETTE: Reds, I’m delighted to welcome our long-time friend Cara Black back to the blog. You probably know her as the author of 21 bestselling Aimee Leduc mysteries set in Paris, but she’s here to introduce something new. You know I will always follow her to Paris...Welcome Cara!

CARA BLACK

Bienvenue, Reds and readers, to Huguette! 

But who is she?

Unlike most of my stories, which begin with a “What if . . .?” Huguette began with a “Who is she?” 


I referred to the mistress of Aimée’s treasured grandfather Claude in several of my Aimée Leduc books set in Paris. he always remained a cipher, making me wonder—who is this woman? Granted, she was only a small detail within the Aiméeverse. Aimée herself wasn’t even born when this novel takes place. If you haven’t read the Aimée Leduc series, no worries, this story stands alone.

Huguette’s life reflects the reality of existence  in postwar France, a little-addressed subject in fiction, though very real and within living memory. This time fascinated me. I knew there had to be more than just what is seen in Libération–era photos of GIs kissing French girls on the Champs-Élysées, popping Champagne, and handing out chocolate. That, combined with the stories I heard about the French cinema from a friend’s mother, spurred me to explore this era. The more I researched, the more I wanted to understand what it would feel like if I wasn’t one of the lucky wearing Dior’s new look in 1947. If, facing rationing, power cuts, and equipment shortages in postwar France, I had to fight to survive. 

That brought me to the character of Huguette. An orphaned young woman struggling with the odds stacked against her—and forced to make tough moral choices for the sake of her own survival. Once I had answered the question “Who is she?” I could pursue “What is her story?” and finally, “What if . . . ?”

Though many of Huguette’s circumstances are specific to the times she lives in, I’ve faced plenty of struggles and hard decisions of my own. Difficult choices when it seems like one can’t win for losing. Maybe you can relate to this, Huguette’s journey and resilience may resonate with you. 


Have you experienced a dilemma and knew the outcome would be life changing? And in so doing find an inner strength? 

Let me know.


Cara Black is the author of twenty-one books in the New York Times bestselling Aimée Leduc series as well as the WWII thrillers Three Hours in Paris and Night Flight to Paris. She has won the Médaille de la Ville de Paris and the Médaille d’Or du Rayonnement Culturel and received multiple nominations for the Anthony and Macavity Awards; her books have been translated into German, Norwegian, Japanese, French, Spanish, Italian, and Hebrew. Her latest book HUGUETTE, a novel of Libération comes out in December.



40 comments:

  1. Happy Book Birthday!
    This sounds like a fascinating story, Cara . . . I'm looking forward to meeting Huguette . . . .

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  2. Ohhhhhh welcome! And wow, this must have been so compelling and life-changing for you to write… Tell us more!

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    1. Hank ! Writing Huguette was life changing - my process became so different as I got to 'know' her and work on my flexing my fiction muscles. This became her story and her journey with the backdrop of a war torn Europe.

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  3. Happy Book Birthday, Cara. The book sounds intriguing. Like you, I am fascinated by that era but I have read little about what it was like in France. The reprisals against those who collaborated with the Germans must have been brutal, and in my opinion, they still haven't come to terms with what they did to their Jews during the war. This book is going straight onto my TBR. I am eager to meet Huguette and see that world through her eyes.

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    1. Thanks, Judy. Touching on what you said, so many people I interviewed told me no one wanted to talk about the war. They wanted to move on and only much later did they reveal thing to their children and grandchildren.

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  4. Congratulations, Cara. I love historical novels and look forward to reading this one.

    It wasn't a life-or-death dilemma, but deciding to quit my day job twelve years ago to write crime fiction full time was a leap of faith, and I'm so glad I did it.

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    1. Leap of faith and courageous, Edith! Quitting a job is huge and I'd think the 'identity' that goes with it, too and carving a new job and finding your writing tribe changes your life.

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  5. How do you pronounce Huguette?

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    1. Probably "you-GET" but Cara will know better than I.

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    2. :) yes the French don't pronounce the H!

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  6. Congratulations! I know some of this Paris from my father's stories and will enjoy reading Huguette.

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    1. Maren, I hope you wrote down or recorded your father's stories. Sounds amazing.

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  7. Congratulations! I have read quite a few books set in post-war Britain, so I feel like I have some understanding of those struggles. And I have even read a few set during the war in France, giving a tiny insight into that period. But I don't believe I have ever read anything set in post-war France. I look forward to reading this one.

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    1. Thanks, Susan, I too ,found little written about the postwar period. In France rationing continued for years, the infrastructure was hobbled and those men returning from POW camps, and the deported who'd managed to survive found a different France than before.

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  8. Congratulations! I am looking forward to immersing myself in post war Paris as I meet Huguette.

    I was the one to sign the papers in the hospital for my dad, discontinuing treatment. It haunts me a bit, because he really wanted a magic pill to make him well. He did recover enough to go home and had a couple of weeks more, but at the time I signed the paper, it didn't seem like there was any good choice.

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    1. That sounds like a tough decision, Gillian. Between a rock and a hard place. Those last weeks with him will stay with you.

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    2. That is a tough situation. For me, I think being at home, when possible, is a better end than being in a hospital.

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  9. This is such a 'Reds' day - tonight I'm having my book launch with Rhys at my local Indie bookstore and we'll discuss Mrs Endicott and Huguette, the book tours we've done and how I saved her from a kidnapper in LA once.

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    1. Now there's a tale! Maybe you and Rhys can share that story sometime, Cara!

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    2. Yes, I would love to hear that, Cara.

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    3. It had to do with a white panel van following us!

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  10. Félicitations on this new book, Cara! I enjoy the Aimée Leduc series (I mean, Paris! Mystery!) Post-war Europe living must have been so, so difficult for ordinary people! (Europe during the war it goes without saying). I am very much looking forward to reading, and getting to know, Huguette! Merci!

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    1. Cheers, Suzette. Huguette's 17 years old when the story starts and grows into a young woman during turbulent times.

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  11. Congratulations on your new historical fiction novel, Cara!

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  12. Cara, I think all books are a mystery--as a reader, I read to solve the puzzle of who these characters are and what's their story. But to write a book like this coming from an author of mysteries and thrillers--I imagine it was a different process. And this time period fascinates me--individuals trying to survive in the face of so much loss and devastation. I'll definitely add this to my list of must-reads.

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    1. I meant to add, we had a stray tabby cat show up last year. We named him Hugo. Hugo had four kittens and became Huguette. :-)

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    2. Huguette la chat! Love it. At first, I'd imagined this as a revenge story, getting back and getting even at the wrongs and injustice she suffered. But she grew on me and this called for more complex issues for her to face.

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  13. Cara, I am interested in France after WWII. I got interested in it when reading about the French women accuses of "horizontal collaboration" with the German soldiers. I was surprised to read that around 200,000 babies were born from such collaborations. My feelings about the treatment of these women is split, as there were French women fighting in the resistance against the Germans, and then there were these women sleeping with the enemy. However, the reasons weren't just for sex or romance; sometimes it was to protect their family. A complicated issue. Also, I'm not pleased that men who collaborated seemed to get off easier and not marched through the streets with shaven heads. Now, I can read in Huguette how the average citizen of France had to struggle after the war. That has to be interesting, as well as informative.

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    1. Kathy, a complicated issue as you say. Not black or white but shades of grey. I met a woman who's mother had been a respected middle school teacher and after Libération was denounced for collaboration with a German. She lost her job and the children were taken and raised by their father who'd just returned from a POW camp. It was hard to imagine and heartbreaking to listen to her. But she kept saying, I lived a good life and have grandchildren.

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  14. I have been fortunate in my life, but as I have gotten older I have become much more understanding of the “bad choices” others have made, as I better understood they were in situations that only offered bad options.

    I am very excited that you are doing the ALG Aprés-midi in Paris in April. Sounds like a good excuse for me to visit from Nice.

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    1. Lisa, totally relate to situations that only offer bad options and carrying that weight. So interesting that you've become more understanding. See you at Aprés-Midi!

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  15. Congratulations, Cara!

    I've been pretty lucky in life, but 34 years ago, I faced a dilemma: I was a single female Army Captain and came up hot on a pregnancy test. This was 1991, when (in my experience) the Army was not particularly fond of women in uniform and REALLY not fond of single moms in uniform! I weighed my options and happily report that the birth of my daughter was the best moment of my life! It wasn't always easy, but she has changed my life a million times for the better and I am every day grateful day for her.

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    1. Robin, what a choice to have to make at that time and point in your career. As you point out, it's different for a single woman and bravo - so happy for you!

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  16. Cara, I've always been fascinated by post-war France and how the non-sympathizers found their place in a fast-changing world. I have French friends who were among les enfants cachés and emerged from their hidden places only to learn they had lost parents and family. Reading their personal accounts, engaging in many conversations with them, makes your novel all the more important. (And hello, Cara, I hope all is well!)

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    1. Bonjour Victoria! Nice to 'see' you here. Personal accounts and hearing them make it all the more real. Those stories make me think of the 'what if..it was me' and how would I face this situation.

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  17. Hi, Cara! Always so happy to have you with us here! Like so many others, I am fascinated by life in post war France, as well as being a big fan of Aimee, so I can't wait to meet Huguette!

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    1. Thanks, Debs! We also meet a young Claude Leduc, Aimée's grandfather, as he opens his detective agency. He's on a tight budget, an inveterate bargain hunter and haunts the auction houses to furnish it!

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  18. OOOHHHH!!! I'm so excited. You know I'm a huge fan, Cara. Very excited to read about post-war France. Congrats on your release!

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    1. Jen, thanks! Love your books. If you've seen the pictures of the GI's on the Champs Elysee kissing the girls, popping Champagne and handing out chocolates it painted a rosy photo at Libération but the reality of day to day life was different.

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