Skylark by Paula McLain

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Skylark by Paula McLain

Historical fiction

Skylark

by Paula McLain

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Quick take

A poignant tale of bravery in the face of oppression, spanning centuries but connected by an underground city in Paris.

Good to know

  • Illustrated icon, 400

    400+ pages

  • Illustrated icon, Multiple_Viewpoints

    Multiple viewpoints

  • Illustrated icon, Nonlinear_Timeline

    Nonlinear timeline

  • Illustrated icon, War

    War

Synopsis

1664: Alouette Voland is the daughter of a master dyer at the famed Gobelin Tapestry Works, who secretly dreams of escaping her circumstances and creating her own masterpiece. When her father is unjustly imprisoned, Alouette’s efforts to save him lead to her own confinement in the notorious Salpêtrière asylum, where thousands of women are held captive and cruelly treated. But within its grim walls, she discovers a small group of brave allies, and the possibility of a life bigger than she ever imagined.

1939: Kristof Larson is a medical student beginning his psychiatric residency in Paris, whose neighbors on the Rue de Gobelins are a Jewish family who have fled Poland. When Nazi forces descend on the city, Kristof becomes their only hope for survival, even as his work as a doctor is jeopardized.

A spellbinding and transportive look at a side of Paris known to very few—the underground city that is a mirror reflection of the glories above—Paula McLain’s unforgettable new novel chronicles two parallel journeys of defiance and rescue that connect in ways both surprising and deeply moving.

Content warning

This book contains scenes depicting the death of a child.

Read a sample

Get an early look from the first pages of Skylark.

Skylark

PROLOGUE

The fire peels Notre-Dame like an illuminated manuscript soaked in water, its layers separating, releasing their secrets. The roof and spire catch, lead cladding spilling down limestone walls. Eight hundred years become liquid silver.

Inside, the medieval attic nicknamed “la Forêt”—“the Forest”—groans under flame, then shatters. The spire twists and falls, puncturing the heart of the vault floor below. Yet even as the ancient beams burn on, carpenter’s symbols become visible on them, tool marks hidden since the twelfth century—adze cuts, saw patterns, perfect joints. In the domed web of the ceiling, acoustic chambers emerge like loosed birds. Hollow spaces shaped to catch and amplify chants and whispers. Iron clamps tumble, each recalling a builder’s quest to defy gravity, to reach beyond the possible.

Later, in the still-smoldering ruins, researchers will find more intimate human traces: names and fingerprints left in ancient mortar. A pilgrim’s scratched prayer in a corner stone. A mason’s hidden rendering of his daughter’s face. Measured marks showing how each stone was cut, but also hesitation, correction, the yearning, imperfect moments between the dream of beauty and its execution.

And when the embers finally cool and the last of the smoke lifts, a conservator sifting through debris uncovers one last secret: a shard of pigmented glass no larger than a coin. She holds it to the light, frowning at its unusual shade. A sheer but concentrated blue that is neither cobalt nor lapis. Not the midnight blue of Chartres, but something more distilled and diaphanous, like the place where the sea meets the sky.

Perhaps it was part of an abandoned design or lost restoration, she thinks. For now, a mystery. As she sets it in the preservation box for further study, her eye catches on something etched into one corner, faint but unmistakable. A tiny bird, wings spread wide in flight. Not a formal heraldic design, but something ordinary and intimate—a swift or swallow hand drawn for inexplicable reasons.

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Other books by Paula McLain

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New and recent add-ons
View all
This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me
The Ending Writes Itself
Into the Blue
A Good Person
Nothing Tastes as Good
Last Night in Brooklyn
The Paris Match
The Book Witch
And Now, Back to You
Just Friends
You Did Nothing Wrong
Wolf Worm
The Secret Lives of Murderers’ Wives
No Matter What