It's a World War II story. The main character is a blind girl, not yet a teenager at the start of the story, and 16 at the end. She and her father, a locksmith employed by a major museum, fled Paris for her great uncle's home at the seaside. What young Marie-Laure didn't know when they left is that her father was carrying one of four of the Sea of Flames, a huge and supposedly cursed diamond owned by the museum, which commissioned three replicas as the Germans closed in on Paris. But someone knows the Sea of Flames exists, and is intent on finding it. Marie-Laure has to navigate not only her challenges as a blind person in a new place and the normal ravages of war, but also the knowledge that her family may be in possession of the hunted gem.
It was a very quick listen (perhaps because I listened to it at 1.3x speed?), and I wonder if it was as quick of a read as well. It did not feel like it would have equated to a 500-plus page book, that's for sure. There were some ancillary characters whom I think the story could have been told without, but they added a certain amount of heart and balance to the tale which, in my opinion, is what made it really sing.

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