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A review by kikiandarrowsfishshelf
Notre-Dame: The Soul of France by Agnès C. Poirier
5.0
Disclaimer: ARC via Netgalley
Early in her book about Notre-Dame de Paris, Poirer writes, “We need certainties: they are the framework of our existence, the signposts without which we can’t navigate life, let alone endure its many tests and trials; for 850 years Notre-Dame was one such “ (location 36).
Poirer is right. Many people over the world were affected by the fire that ravaged Notre-Dame. I was surprised by how much a sense of loss I felt when I saw the news. Poirier’s book is a history of the cathedral, a general one but an engrossing and extremely readable one. Her love for the book is on every single page.
Poirer starts with an account of the fire, bringing into the light, some details that might not be known to the causal reader of the event. Her details of not only the rescue of the Cathedral itself but also of the art works. She then moves into a history of the Cathedral showing that the fire was not the only near destruction that the building faced.
While the book is general, something that is easily discerned from its length, there are interesting tidbits and facts – like the first royal buried there, what happened to the lead coffins, how the art survived the revolution and so on.
In many ways, it is like reading the monolog of an excellent tour guide.