Cover Image: The Museum of Broken Promises

The Museum of Broken Promises

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Member Reviews

Thought provoking and beautifully written. The locations make you want to visit them and find out more. Thank you for letting me review this book.

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Meet Laure, museum creator curator extraordinaire. The Museum is full of donations of items of loss and hope, and love, and it is a curious place that attracts those seeking ghosts, memories, closure or sometimes just to feel something. Laure has a tumultuous past and she has found a way through it by creating the Museum.
In this story the reader embraces themes of pain, grief, heartbreak, disappointment and love. It is a beautiful story that both transports the reader to 1985 Prague but also to a catalogue of real artefacts of broken promises.

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I feel so frustrated to have to say that this just didn’t do it for me, usually I love Elizabeth Buchans books but this just didn’t feel right.

I found this book very long winded and I struggled to finish it.
However, this wouldn’t put me off reading another book by this author.

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Laure Carlyle is the curator of the Museum of Broken Promises, a unique museum in Paris based on her own concept and made up of objects that people have donated that represent something that’s gone badly wrong in their life – a promise made and later broken, a form of betrayal, secrets and lies. Laure curates these artefacts into a display in her adopted hometown in the hope that letting go of some of the anger, hurt and disappointment that the object embodies will help those who donate to the museum, as well as engage and entertain those that visit to read the stories behind the items. A burgeoning success, there is a lot of media interest in Laure’s museum, and an assertive young journalist named Meg comes to interview her, which is a difficult turn of events for the intensely private Laure to deal with.

We learn via time-slip that back in 1985 as a twenty-year old Laure gave up her university studies after the death of her father, and under orders from her French mother, she moved to Paris to heal. Taking a job as a nanny/au-pair, with the Kobe family, Petr, Eva and their two children, she starts to enjoy life a little again, when suddenly, 3 weeks into her tenure, the family announce that they are to move back to their home country of Czechoslovakia. After giving it some thought, Laure agrees to accompany them, finding Prague a very different place then we know it to be today. Half English/half French Laure is woefully unprepared for the world waiting for her behind the Iron Curtain and has to quickly adapt to a life where her every move is watched, and scrutinised by shadowy figures lurking in doorways, knowing that a simple mistake, or mis-step, can put the Kobes, and herself, in immediate and very real danger.

Young and impressionable, Laure gets involved with a dissident creatives group who use marionette theatre to deliver their messages and very soon, she’s falling for their ‘Pop Star’ leader Tomas. Petr is unhappy with this liaison, ostensibly because Laure is potentially inviting unwanted attention with her behaviour, but also because he quite obviously is developing feelings for her. It’s no real surprise though, she is a young and vivacious woman living in his house alongside him and his children, who clearly love their young nanny. Petra’s wife Eva is still unwell, and appears to be ailing further, and Laure has all but taken over her roles within the household.

Petr warns Laure that she is playing a dangerous game becoming involved with the theatre group and their political leanings, and especially the outspoken Tomas. Laure suspects Petr’s is perhaps not a simple businessman, and that the real reason he is living and working in Prague with an elevated lifestyle is that he is working for the state; a suspicion fed by Tomas and his gang who believe this to be the case. Unsurprisingly, and to Petr’s fury, events spiral out of Laure’s control, and her life and well-being is endangered in a couple of terrifying incidents, which leave her desperate to escape Prague with Tomas.

Fast forward ten years and Laure is in an important role at the British Embassy in Berlin, another city familiar with the difficulties of communism. She meets up with Petr, now working for a large big Pharma company, and she wants answers that she believes he has.

The Museum of Broken Promises is a beautifully written book – you can almost feel the tension in some parts, and the descriptive accounts of Prague under communist rule, and Paris, make it feel so alive. I also loved the concept of Laure’s museum. I was reading day by day as part of the Pigeonhole book club and perhaps that is why, but I found the pace of the book a bit too slow; it felt like it took me quite a while to figure out what the story was actually about. I found the different timeframes a little confusing and unfortunately, although they are multi-faceted and beautifully flawed, I didn’t really connect with any of the characters, except perhaps Laure when she is upset by a missing cat - which is given more context towards the very end of the book.


3.5

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I would love to give this Book a Full review but sadly I was taken ill before I could read very much , but I was being drawn into the world of memories that Laure, the owner and curator of this unusual Museum including some of her own which I hoped was going bring peace & also happiness to it's many visitors including Laure herself. I can only give a three start rating because I haven't completed the Book , but feel sure when I get the chance too that this rating will then be raised to five stars.

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I was hooked from the prologue. And as the story moves along I was pulled in deeper and deeper.

We witness some poignant scenes in the museum and through journalist May, get to see interviews where hopeful donators emotions are pared down to the core. Such pain and anguish from those broken promises. Laure’s own artefacts take us back to 1986 in Prague as an au pair to the Kobes family. This is so compelling – the atmosphere heavy and full of fear during the Cold War. Living alongside the characters gave me the chills. It made me realise just how fortunate we are to have the freedom to think and act. Yes, I saw the media during the Velvet Revolution in 1989 when the Berlin Wall was hacked down but it didn’t really have an impact on my life. The Museum of Broken Promises is thought provoking and brings reality to those televised images.

The undercurrents of the complicated relationship Laure has with the Kobes come out of the shadows 10 years after Laure leaves their employ. Bleak oh so bleak. It’s a journey they must take to be able to start to heal and move on.

Although I didn’t get my Happy Ever After in one respect, it was close enough. I cried at the ending (Milos!). Closure isn’t always about love for another. Forgiveness for one’s self and loving oneself is also an important emotional healing.

The Museum of Broken Promises is a story about the headiness of the first time you fall in love with the complication of living in a Communist state. It’s about fighting for your beliefs and shows us how experiences shape lives for ever.

Outstanding!

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A new look at a not well known period of history, interesting and full of suspense. I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys historical fiction

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A beautiful book. Beautiful, shocking, harrowing in turn.
Laure and Tomas meet and fall in love in Prague, during the last period of the destructive, totalitarian Communist rule of Czechoslovakia. .
This is a story of the violence they live through - read it! It’s unmissable.

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Lauren is the curator and creator of the Museum of Broken Promises in Paris. But what prompted her to set it up? We need to go back to Communist Prague to find out why.

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An unusual and carefully crafted book. The story moves from Paris to Prague, and back again frequently and so needs some concentration. This is repaid with a beautiful and thoughtful love story.
Thank you to the publisher and Netgalley for the ARC

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Laure Carlyle’s father has passed away and she is devastated by her loss. She agrees to take a proactive year out to take her mind off her misery. She becomes the nanny to Czech businessman Petr Kobe, his wife and two lovely children now stationed in Prague. It’s 1985 and life behind the Iron Curtain is dull, dangerous and darkly desperate. There are agents and spies around every corner, just everywhere. Ruled by Communists, but with dissidents working ‘behind closed doors’, rebelling about their country’s system of government, Laure finds herself in grave danger when she falls in love with Tomas, a musician who is part of a dissident community, participating under the guise of puppeteers and musicians. She soon becomes ‘known’ and suddenly she is powerless to escape her romance and the terrifying thrill it brings with it. Her life and the lives of her new friends is about to change and the danger she has wreaked with her passionate love affair alters her future and the futures of others forever.
Years later and now settled in Paris, Laure has founded a modern day museum. She is a beautiful and very successful business woman, but is still haunted by her past. The museum holds an ever changing collection of items that their owner has donated to put on display and tells their story of betrayal. Laure starts the displays with items of her own, reflecting their sad story. The items donated are an eclectic mix, spread out in themed rooms throughout the whole museum. These items always reflect unforgotten ghosts of the past that must be laid to rest. It’s a place full of stories, memories and more often than not unhappiness, but sometime resolution as well. It is funded by anonymous benefactors and visited by tourists from all over the world who examine the exhibits with care and compassion. There are wedding veils, travel tickets, a baby’s lone shoe and many more poignant items. Laure’s own items are hidden in plain sight but she still has not come to terms with what happened to her all those years ago in Prague.
This is very much Laure’s own story told in dual time frame, where truths must be revealed before she is freed from her guilt, and will be able to live her life without the shadows of the past crippling her. It’s a poignant story about first true love set against the exceptionally dark days of dictatorship and a romance that was doomed from the word ‘Go’. I have really enjoyed other novels by this author and I was excited when I was accepted to review ‘The Museum of Broken Promises', but for me it did not always live up to my expectations. The storytelling was fine but I didn’t connect with any of the characters; they stayed in the distance and I was unable to relate to them. I had been intrigued by the blurb but the novel was not what I had expected it to be, it didn’t deliver with the impact that I had hoped for.
I received this book through my membership of NetGalley and from publisher Atlantic Books in return for an honest review. Thank you for my copy. I quite liked parts of the novel but disliked other parts for the reasons I have already mentioned. It’s a 3.5* review from me.

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Set in Prague, Paris and Berlin, The Museum of Broken Promises is a tragic tale of lost love, betrayal and the redemptive power of forgiveness. Laure works as an au pair for the Kobes family in Prague at a time of political unrest. She meets Tomas and his friends who are political dissidents and falls for Tomas in a way that frightens her for she is never completely convinced his love is genuine and she fears that love will lead to humiliation. As we jump from the present to the past and observe their story we gain a deeper understanding of why Laure opened her Museum of Broken Promises - it offers a space to begin again'.

As political unrest becomes dangerous, Laure asks Tomas to leave Prague with her, but he doesn't make it and Laure is haunted by the uncertainty of what happened to him. As her former employer Petr Kobe returns into her life she is finally able to lay the ghost of Tomas to rest and forgive both herself and others for the past and the decisions that led to such a tragic outcome.

This book is atmospheric and beautifully written, seamlessly taking us forwards and backwards from the present to the past. Original and thought provoking, and after all, 'which one of us has not experienced a broken promise in our lives?'

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Wonderful and haunting, this is the story of Laure and her time in Prague in the 1980's. Even though I know little about this period in history, this book really appealed to me and I’m so pleased that I gave it a go. There were two reasons why I knew I wanted to read this novel – the first, because I knew from past experience that Elizabeth Buchan is a talented and accomplished story-teller. The second was because the concept of a museum dedicated to artefacts which represent loss, grief and broken promises was really fascinating.

Laure now lives in Paris and is the curator of the Museum of Broken Promises, a place where people bring items that reflect a promise which was made to them but was then broken. Through these artefacts and via interviews with a journalist, the reader starts to learn about Laure's past and the circumstances that have led her to this point in her life.

The writing is beautiful and the story memorable and noteworthy and I'm certain that this is one of those books that will remain with me. I recommend The Museum of Broken Promises, without hesitation, to anyone who is partial to historical or literary fiction.

I received a complimentary copy of this novel from Corvus via NetGalley at my own request. This review is my own unbiased opinion. Thank you also to Pigeonhole and Elizabeth Buchan for giving me the opportunity to read this book!

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I found this book quite hard going in parts. The setting, Prague during the final few years of the communist regime, was interesting but I found some sections a bit long winded.
The descriptions of the locations are great and I liked some of the characters but some bits just didn’t ring true. Laure takes the children to a marionette show which the authorities know is run by ‘subversives’ and yet Petr and Eva seem fine with them going, even though it is clear from the outset that Petr is very much part of the regime. You would expect that a man in his position would have sent her packing. The idea that he would be ruled by his feelings for her seem a bit far fetched.
The plot promises much but I was a little disappointed. It seems to fall between a hard hitting examination of communism during this period and a romance and ultimately falls short on both counts.
I did enjoy it and it is well written but not one of my favourites.
My thanks to Netgalley, the author and publisher for this copy.

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The Museum of Broken Promises by Elizabeth Buchan is a gorgeous, well written love story and I enjoyed every moment.

The story has two settings - firstly it is set in the Paris of today at the Museum of Broken Promises where unusual and important objects have been donated each with a tragic back story. The museum is looked after by Laure.

The second setting is Prague, 1985 during the Cold War where we follow a young Laure who has fled there after her fathers' death. The city is a dangerous place but Laure cannot help falling in love and this relationship will be the most dangerous thing of all...

I don't want to say any more as its best to not know anything but suffice to say this is a beautiful life affirming book and I adored it with all my heart and soul

I received copies from both Netgalley and Readers first in exchange for an honest review.

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Sometimes I catch sight of a new book I just have to read as soon as possible. It doesn’t happen often and it’s always a leap of faith; will a favourite author dash my expectation of brilliance – or will they, once again, triumph.

Elizabeth Buchan’s The Museum of Broken Promises is, like her other books, a slow starter. I have learnt to be patient while she creates a tapestry of detail so rich and wonderful, holding my breath until to story tips into second, third and fourth gears and becomes unputdownable.

The book is set in Paris in the present day and in Prague in the 1980s. The end of the Cold War was in touching distance, yet nobody knew it, and this adds an additional poignancy to the narrative. Laure, a young woman coming to terms with the death of her father is an au pair to a businessman and party insider, and while trying to make some sense of life behind the Iron Curtain, meets a dissident musician who steals her heart and soul. Years later in France, she sets up the Museum of Broken Promises, full of artefacts people donate in attempt to avenge or assuage the pain of betrayal – and some of them belong to her own past.

Slowly the book teases out truths from a long ago Czechoslovakian summer. One moment achingly beautiful, the other shocking in its violence, the whole fits together like a handmade glove. It stayed with me, too – and it’s only now I’m writing this review I finally understand the most important promise. And who broke it. A must read. Honestly.

This review will appear in Frost magazine on 30th September.

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I would absolutely visit this museum!
This is a story about a museum that contains the physical objects that symbolise a broken promise or a betrayal to those who have donated them (and this is SUCH a good idea for a museum!). The Museum of Broken Promises is in Paris, and its owner Laure chooses the items that go in to the museum after she either speaks to the donator, or simply reads the note that is sent with the item. Laure has experience in these matters: her own object sits in the museum.

I don’t know what I was expecting from this novel, but I was so surprised by the way this story progressed. Laure as a young woman becomes an au pair for a Czech family in Paris after her father dies. She then realises that she needs a break from university to grieve and get away from her life for a while. So when the family return to Prague for the summer, Laure goes with them. And so begins her life behind the iron curtain.

What follows is a love story between Laure and a musician and political activist, Tomas. We see how restricted people and their thoughts were, and we see why Laure becomes the woman she is in present day Paris.

I really liked the way we moved back and forth through time with Laure, and got to see Prague before its Velvet Revolution, Germany just after the Wall comes down and Paris in the present day. Laure is far more complex a character than I expected her to be at first.

I adored this book. It’s a sad story told so well - and I warn you that the end should be read with tissues to hand.

Many thanks to the publisher Corvus and NetGalley for my copy of this book.

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This novel takes us to the streets of modern day Paris, Communist Prague and post-Cold War Berlin and Prague. What really drew me in is the hauntingly beautiful idea for a museum of 'broken promises' - all the items have been donated by people who have experienced great loss or betrayal through a broken promise.

Items such as a ticket stubs, a wedding veil, shoes and clothes for a young child, and a black antique phone hold stories of a wealth of hidden promises. Buchan lets us glimpse the weight of the losses behind these objects: telling us little stories within the bigger story. While the love story running throughout the novel captivates us with its passion and danger, it was these little windows into a heartbreaking moments that really stole my heart. I actually could have done with more of those stories, and the story therefore meandered a bit for me after the strong, intriguing start.

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I was looking forward to reading a variety of stories from the pieces donated to the museum and this didn’t happen, so maybe a somewhat misleading title. However, the love story based in Prague during communist rule was disturbing and one that brought home just how recent those problems are and this is the concept that I will always remember. It reinforces my view that history and recent history is brought to life more vividly through the medium of well researched fact based fiction than any number of history classes taught at school. This is a concept that underpinned my buying of most fiction in the Further Education libraries I worked in and this particular novel would be a cert for the history department!
The writing is, of course, well done by such an accomplished novelist but I did find it a bit of a chore at times and took a break half way through for a quick easy read (a sort of readers sorbet) before being able to complete.
Thank you author, publisher and Netgalley for the opportunity to read this for an unbiased review.

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A well written beautifully planned out novel. A little long, but a must-read nonetheless. POetic and atmospheric you are transported back to time and place. Full of intrigue, thrills and suspense. Recommended

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