The Paris Girl: The Young Woman Who Outwitted the Nazis and Became a WWII Hero [View all]
https://www.amazon.com/Paris-Girl-Young-Outwitted-Became/dp/0806544295
Movingly written by her own daughter, this captivating and intimate biography chronicles the astonishing courage Andrée Griotteray, a teenage girl in Nazi-occupied Paris who would become a hero of the French Resistance through her harrowing work as an underground intelligence courier. For readers of Three Ordinary Girls, A Woman of No Importance, Lis Parisiennes, The Girls Who Stepped Out of Line, and the many other untold stories of WWIIs hidden figures.
Andrée Griotteray was just 19 when the Germans invaded France and occupied Paris, where she worked as a clerk in the passport office. When her younger brother, Alain, created a resistance network named Orion, Andrée joined his efforts, secretly typing up and printing copies of an underground newspaper, and stealing I.D. cards which allowed scores of Jewish citizens to escape persecution.
Charming and pretty, Andrée nimbly avoided the unwanted attentions of German officers, even as she secretly began working as an undercover courier. Displaying fearlessness in the face of immense pressure, she traveled throughout the county delivering vital intelligence destined for Frances alliesuntil the day she was betrayed and arrested.
Throughout her ordeal, Andrée stayed composed, refusing to inform on her comrades. Before she was set free, she even duped her interrogators into revealing who had betrayed Orion, and continued her underground activities until Frances liberation.
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A good read with much practical survival thinking by those involved. The Resistance had many independent organizations, if created in the minds of many post-war. SOE and OSS, British and American intelligence, respectively, were fighting for turf and control while cooperating with Resistance groups. It is rare to find a book told from the French perspective in such detail, in my reading experience anyway.