Veteran TV journalist
Calvin Jones travels to Paris, where he negotiates love, friendship, and
despair in award-winning novelist Greg Garrett’s Bastille Day.
With
brilliant pacing and gorgeous prose, acclaimed novelist Greg Garrett
tells the story of American TV journalist Calvin Jones, who travels to
Paris to work with a producer friend he knows from their dark days
covering the war in Iraq.
Cal Jones has had a quiet ten years, by
design. After surviving the loss of two people he loved in the Iraq
war, which he covered as a national correspondent, he fell apart and
retreated to a local news job in Texas. Cal is still wrestling with
those old demons when he goes to Paris to work with an old friend and
encounters Nadia, a brilliant, lovely, and sad Saudi Muslim woman in
Paris with plans to wed a Saudi sheikh in a family-arranged marriage.
Against
his own better judgment, Cal falls for Nadia, even dragging her from
the Seine when she attempts to solve her insoluble problem by taking her
own life. He begins to risk a heart he thought was too badly broken to
ever love again, and as the wedding ticks closer, to hope that perhaps
Nadia can make a choice that includes him. Then their time rescuing each
other is interrupted by the terror attack in Nice, which Cal is called
out to cover. Back in that setting, Cal is thrown back into the memories
of senseless violence and extremism that shattered him in Iraq—and that
threaten to shatter him and his hopes now.
Garrett’s characters wrestle with the ghosts of their pasts, as they long for love, friendship, and faith in the present. Bastille Day is a gloriously-affecting novel about how our histories can damage us, but hope can heal us.