An 'utterly gripping' tale of love and espionage in Occupied France
by the Man Booker Prize shortlisted author of The Glass Room (Daily
Mail) Marian Sutro is an outsider: the daughter of a diplomat,
brought up on the shores of Lake Geneva and in England, half
French, half British, naive yet too clever for her own good. But
when she is recruited from her desk job by SOE, the Special
Operations Executive, to go undercover in wartime France, it seems
her hybrid status - and fluent French - will be of service to a
greater, more dangerous cause. Trained in sabotage, dead-drops, how
to perform under interrogation and how to kill, Marian parachutes
into south-west France, her official mission to act as a Resistance
courier. But her real destination is Paris, where she must seek out
family friend Clement Pelletier, once the focus of her adolescent
desires. A nuclear physicist engaged in the race for a new and
terrifying weapon, he is of urgent significance to her superiors.
As she struggles through the strange, lethal landscape of the
Occupation towards this reunion, what completes her training is the
understanding that war changes everything, and neither love nor
fatherland may be trusted. 'There are many shades of Graham Greene
here... [The Girl Who Fell From the Sky] delivers its story with
the same delicate, stropped-razor deadliness that creeps up on you
like Harry Lime in the shadows, nastily irresistible' -Financial
Times 'Mawer cranks up the tension; as spy stuff this is as good as
Le Carre or Eric Ambler, no higher praise possible' -The Scotsman
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Review This Product
Phenomenal protagonist parachutes into literary fiction
Sun, 25 Jun 2017 | Review
by: Alexandra B.
Simon Mawer is a wonderful find. An epic storyteller whose characters leap fully formed from the page. Fortunately there is a second book called Tightrope which continues the life of his fascinating protagonist post the Second World War.
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