Hotel Exile

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1930s
1940s
A01=Jane Rogoyska
Author_Jane Rogoyska
bohemian
books for men 2026
Category=JPA
Category=JWKF
Category=NHD
Category=NHTB
Category=NHWR7
cultural history
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
european history
exile
history
history books
hitler
identity
literary avant-garde
memory
military
nazism
paris
politics
true story
twentieth-century europe
world war 2
world war two
wwii

Product details

  • ISBN 9780241679630
  • Weight: 580g
  • Dimensions: 163 x 243mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Feb 2026
  • Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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**SHORTLISTED FOR THE WOMEN’S PRIZE FOR NONFICTION**


A FOYLES TOP TEN READ FOR FEBRUARY | A 2026 HIGHLIGHT IN THE FINANCIAL TIMES, EVENING STANDARD AND THE BOOKSELLER

A meeting place for Europe’s bohemian artists. A headquarters of the Nazi occupation. A shelter for camp survivors.

This is the true story of how one Paris hotel came to hold the weight of a century.

The Hotel Lutetia is a Paris institution, the only ‘grand’ hotel on the city’s bohemian Left Bank. Ever since it opened, it has served as a meeting place for artists, musicians and politicians. André Gide took his lunch here, James Joyce lived in one of its rooms, Picasso and Matisse were regular guests. It has a darker history, too. During one short period, it became a focus for some of the most dramatic and terrible events in recent history.

In the 1930s the Hotel Lutetia attracted intellectuals and political activists, forced to flee their homes when Hitler came to power, who met here with the hope of forming an alternative government. But when war came, Paris was occupied, and the hotel became the headquarters of the German military intelligence service – and the centre of their operation to root out enemies of the Reich. In 1945, the Lutetia was requisitioned once more, this time transformed into a reception centre for deportees returning from concentration camps.

Hotel Exile is about what happens on the edges of a war. At its heart are three groups of people connected to a place, to one another, and to the dark ideology which dictates the course of their lives. A masterpiece of empathy and concision, Jane Rogoyska’s extraordinary new book offers us a vision of individual human beings desperately trying to find a path through some of the twentieth century’s most devastating events.

Jane Rogoyska is the author of Surviving Katyn: Stalin’s Polish Massacre and the Search for Truth, Gerda Taro: Inventing Robert Capa and the novel Kozlowski.

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