by Olesya Salnikova Gilmore
The Fortune Tellers of Rue Daru is one of those rare historical novels that feels both intimate and haunting. Set within the Russian émigré community of 1920s Paris, the story blends mystery, spirituality, and family secrets into something far more thoughtful than a conventional gothic thriller.
What stayed with me most was the emotional atmosphere. Olesya Salnikova Gilmore creates a Paris filled with displaced people carrying memories of another life, another country, and unresolved grief. The séances, tea rituals, and fortune-telling rooms on Rue Daru are richly imagined, but the real “ghosts” in this novel are loss, exile, and inherited silence.
At the center are Zina and Baba Valya, two women whose relationship gives the novel its heart. They are complex, protective, flawed, and deeply human. The story thoughtfully explores how women survive upheaval and how family secrets can shape generations long after the original wounds were created.
I also appreciated the restraint of the supernatural elements. The novel never slips into cheap horror. Instead, the mystical aspects feel tied to memory and emotional truth, which makes the story more unsettling and believable.
Our book club selected this novel for discussion, and it generated thoughtful conversations about family history, displacement, resilience, and the emotional weight of secrets passed between generations. For purposes of full disclosure and transparency, Random House kindly provided me with a complimentary review copy of this book.
The pacing occasionally slows in the middle, but the prose remains elegant and immersive throughout. Even during quieter sections, the novel maintains a dreamlike tension that keeps you invested.
For readers who enjoy atmospheric historical fiction, layered female characters, and mysteries rooted in emotion rather than shock, The Fortune Tellers of Rue Daru is deeply rewarding. It is melancholy, intelligent, and quietly unforgettable.
Olesya Salnikova Gilmore is the author of The Witch and the Tsar and The Haunting of Moscow House. Originally from Moscow, she was raised in the US and graduated from Pepperdine University with a BA in English/political science, and from Northwestern School of Law with a JD. She practiced litigation at a large law firm in Chicago for several years before pursuing her dream of becoming an author. She writes speculative gothic suspense and other dark fiction. She also loves exploring Eastern European history and folklore. Her work has appeared in LitHub, Tor.com, CrimeReads, Writer’s Digest, and Washington Independent Review of Books, among others. She lives in a wooded, lakeside suburb of Chicago with her husband and two daughters.
Berkley
ISBN-13: 978-0593952689







