The French photographer by Natasha Lester
Hachette, 2019. ISBN: 9780733640025.
(Age: 16+) Recommended. Historical fiction. In 1942, Jessica May, a
beautiful and much sought after model for Vogue magazine, has her
career cut short when her ex-boyfriend sells her image for a Kotex
advertisement. She finds herself blacklisted because nobody wants a
model linked to the taboo subject of menstruation. But the flipside
is that for the first time she considers what she would really like
to do - and that is to become a photojournalist reporting on the war
front.
And so it passes that Jess finds herself, along with Martha
Gellhorn, Hemingway's wife, venturing as a female reporter into the
war zone. The story of The French photographer is a romance,
Jess falling in love with the dashing American officer, Dan
Hallworth, but it is also the story of the struggle of women war
correspondents to be recognised and respected alongside their male
counterparts. Jess goes from reporting on the nurses' stations at
the front, to documenting the Nazi concentration camps, to war
crimes committed by both sides. She is an intrepid photographer and
reporter who won't be held back by the conservative and chauvinistic
officers she has to report to.
However, interwoven with the story of Dan and Jess, is the story of
a young French child, Victorine, handed by her parents to an
American soldier to save from the advancing German army. Dan becomes
the only father Victorine knows, and Jess also becomes a trusted
friend.
Time shifts to 2004, and D'Arcy Hallworth, a young Australian art
handler, has the task of preparing an exhibition of the work of an
anonymous photographer, a job that sees her trying to untwist the
threads of her own family history, and follow her dream as a
documentary filmmaker. But first she has to uncover many secrets and
learn who to trust.
The two stories interweave in a way that keeps the reader engaged,
and the novel provides a blend of historical fact and fiction that
is both realistic and satisfying. Much of Jessica's story is based
on the experience of war photographer Lee Miller, renown for her
images of women in wartime, and most memorable for her iconic photo
taken in Hitler's bathtub, 1945. Lester includes an account of that
photograph in her story.
Readers of this novel will gain an appreciation of how difficult it
was for women to gain credibility in the workforce, and that whilst
the war opened up new opportunities for women, the doors were quick
to close again once the men had returned. Reading The French
photographer would provide students with an interesting entry
point to researching the history of women's roles during World War
II.
Helen Eddy