The Girl in Blue
Renoir's Portrait of a Dynasty Erased
Contributors
Formats and Prices
- On Sale
- Oct 20, 2026
- Page Count
- 320 pages
- Publisher
- Grand Central Publishing
- ISBN-13
- 9781538757574
Price
$14.99Price
$19.99 CADFormat
Format:
- ebook $14.99 $19.99 CAD
- Hardcover $30.00 $40.00 CAD
- Audiobook Download (Unabridged) $27.99
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In 1941, a specialized German looting unit raided the Chambord chateau in the Loire Valley of France and plundered one of Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s most haunting masterworks: La Petite Irène. The portrait would enchant or curse nearly everyone who coveted it, but the living, breathing girl it depicted slipped from view. This is her story.
She was Irène Cahen d’Anvers, born into Belle Époque privilege and a wealthy Jewish dynasty. Defiant by nature, she abandoned her religion and her arranged marriage, becoming a figure at once scandalous, elusive and resilient.
As the Occupation gripped Paris, her family was targeted, persecuted and deported — punished for demanding the return of what had been stolen. Irène survived by hiding in plain sight, while questions lingered decades later about how and why.
Drawing on newly uncovered documents, newspaper accounts, and archival records, Doreen Carvajal reconstructs the intertwined journeys of a woman and a painting that was seized by the Nazis, traded through a shadowy art market, and pursued by a powerful collector. Their paths converge in a story of beauty and betrayal—the painting a silent witness to what history tried to erase.
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"The Girl in Blue is a riveting tale of survival and belonging. A stolen Renoir masterpiece anchors Doreen Carvajal’s finely crafted narrative about hidden histories and family secrets."David Zucchino, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Wilmington's Lie
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“Doreen Carvajal is, simply put, a magician. Through a single painting—and an especially evocative one—she conjures up not just the painter, the sitter and the family that commissioned it, but the entire worlds of art and bourgeois luxury that mingled so handsomely and ultimately so tragically in the Belle Époque.”John Darnton, author, journalist and Pulitzer Prize winner
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“A vivid and deeply reported portrait of looted art, memory, and one family’s struggle for survival and justice during one of history’s darkest eras.”Dana Canedy, New York Times bestselling author of A Journal for Jordan
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“With The Girl in Blue, Doreen Carvajal achieves the marvelous re-creation of a bygone world, reminding us that the Nazi looting of art was a deep and intense social tragedy involving people, families, and entire communities.”Hector Feliciano, author of The Lost Museum