10 Must-Read Books if You Loved The Paris Wife
If you were swept away by the romantic entanglements, historical depth, and vibrant bohemian spirit of Paula McLain's "The Paris Wife", these 10 books will transport you back to Paris's art-filled cafes and the tumultuous lives of those who called it home.

The Paris Wife
Editor's Top Match
A Moveable Feast
by Ernest Hemingway
Why it's the perfect match
Captures the exact same thematic depth and pacing that made "The Paris Wife" a masterpiece.
The Full Curated Collection
10 Deep Selections

The Count of Monte Cristo
by Alexandre Dumas
A sweeping tale of betrayal, luxury, and redemption set in 19th-century Paris—perfect for readers who crave grand narratives where the city itself becomes a character.
View Essential Insights
The French Dispatch
by Richard Ford

The Beautiful Recluse
by Elizabeth Crook
A WWII-era love story between an American girl and a French pianist, weaving mystery, sacrifice, and the haunting legacy of forbidden affection.

The Unbearable Lightness of Being
by Milan Kundera
A philosophical meditation on love and exile, blending a Parisian heartbreak with Prague's ideological storms—complex, elegant, and impossible to look away from.

The Lady in the Van
by Bailee Madison (autobiographical novel)
A modern queer love story set in Paris, where strangers forge a decades-long bond nearby absolute opposite worlds—a quiet revolution in three acts.

The Lost Girls
by Corinne Grinapol
A darkly comic exploration of friendship, love, and bohemian life in 1930s Paris—ideal for fans of "The Paris Wife's" tension between creativity and destruction.
The Silk Tamils of Sarah R
by Erika Brown Higgs
A suspenseful Parisian fantasy blending mysterious artifacts, forbidden romance, and the haunting allure of a curator's secret-laden past.

The Reef
by Henry James
A 19th-century novel dissecting love and identity in St. Tropez—but written with the same incisive eye on moral ambiguity as McLain's post-war musings.

The Diamond Eye
by Jennifer Chiaverini
A wartime tale of an art conservator in Paris torn between duty and desire—a contemplative, visually rich journey through occupation and obsession.
Slightly different vibe?
Explore adjacent cultural paths branching off from "The Paris Wife".
