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jenbsbooks 's review for:
The Secret Stealers
by Jane Healey
I liked this a lot. It kept my interest all the way though ... I'm just not sure how much I'll remember, and if it will stand out in my memory from all the other WW2 novelizations out there. Here the focus was "women as spies" and it was interesting. I especially appreciated the Author's Notes at the end, on what was based on fact, and some of the different real-life women used for inspiration for the characters here. I feel like I learned a little more of the history (wireless operators, some random tidbits about Christian Dior, John Wayne) but am not sure I know the difference between the OSS, the SOE, etc.
This was all 1st person, Anna's POV - past tense. Chronological, dates listed in some of the chapter headings (just basic numerical chapters in the TOC). Included in KindleUnlimited, read and listen (text and audio) I went with the audio and enjoyed the narrator. Her voice was familiar, I had heard her before. I don't speak French, but some of the French accent/dialog sounded properly done to my untrained ear (better than my imagination). I stopped and made a few highlights. Clean, no proFanity, and while some sex happened, it was closed door. I'd give it a thumbs up for anyone interested in WW2 fiction, especially about women's roles. There was some romance, but not as much as in this author's other work The Beantown Girls.
This was all 1st person, Anna's POV - past tense. Chronological, dates listed in some of the chapter headings (just basic numerical chapters in the TOC). Included in KindleUnlimited, read and listen (text and audio) I went with the audio and enjoyed the narrator. Her voice was familiar, I had heard her before. I don't speak French, but some of the French accent/dialog sounded properly done to my untrained ear (better than my imagination). I stopped and made a few highlights. Clean, no proFanity, and while some sex happened, it was closed door. I'd give it a thumbs up for anyone interested in WW2 fiction, especially about women's roles. There was some romance, but not as much as in this author's other work The Beantown Girls.