Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Marian Sutrová

This series follows the journey of a courageous young woman navigating the tumultuous era of World War II. Readers are drawn into a world brimming with incredible adventures, where romance intertwines with the threat of betrayal. The narratives explore the quest for one's place in a world scarred by global conflict. It offers a profound look into human resilience and the yearning for love amidst adversity.

Tightrope
The Girl Who Fell from the Sky

Recommended Reading Order

  1. 1

    The Girl Who Fell from the Sky

    • 320 pages
    • 12 hours of reading
    3.6(3490)Add rating

    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 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 Clément 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. The Girl Who Fell from the Sky is both a gripping adventure story and a moving meditation on patriotism, betrayal and the limits of love.

    The Girl Who Fell from the Sky
  2. 2

    Marian Sutro has survived Ravensbruck and is now back in dreary 1950s London trying to pick up the pieces of her pre-war life. De-briefed by the same shadowy branch of the secret service that sent her to Paris to extract a French atomic scientist, Marian is now plunged into the cold war. Simon Mawer's sense of time and place is perfect and this is another compelling novel about identity and deception which constantly surprises the reader.

    Tightrope