Paris, 1940. The city of light has gone dark under Nazi occupation. Miriam Mazur is a young Jewish fashion designer trying to survive in a world where one wrong word can mean arrest, deportation—or worse.
When a powerful French police chief begins secretly protecting her family, Miriam finds herself caught in a dangerous web of loyalty, gratitude, and forbidden love.
But survival in occupied Paris comes at a price. As the war tightens its grip on the city, Miriam and her closest friend Mary must navigate a world where love can look like betrayal, trust can be fatal, and the line between victim and collaborator grows dangerously thin.
When liberation finally comes, the reckoning begins. Women accused of collaboration are dragged into the streets, their heads shaved in public humiliation. Old loyalties collapse. New dangers emerge. And Miriam must decide what she is willing to sacrifice—for love, for family, and for the future she still dares to hope for.
Set against the haunting backdrop of wartime Paris, Love and Betrayal in Occupied Paris is a powerful story of survival, courage, and the impossible moral choices faced by those living under occupation. Perfect for readers who loved: The Nightingale, and All the Light We Cannot See, this book is a gripping historical novel about love, war, and the fragile line between heroism and betrayal. Free on Kindle.















































