It is the summer of 1943, and Rosie Ewing is leaving on her second mission to German-occupied France. She's a Special Operations Executive agent and a radio operator. Her brief is to set up a new network in Rouen, where the one agent still at large is suspected of having betrayed his colleagues. She's to be dropped off by a gunboat in a remote cove on the Brittany coast. She then has to get to Paris by train, carrying forged papers, a radio transceiver, and more than a million francs in cash. Terrifyingly vulnerable, she knows the dangers of a second's carelessness and the consequences of crumbling under the force of Gestapo torture.
Alexander Fullerton (1924–2008) was a British author of naval and other fiction. Born in 1924 in Suffolk and brought up in France, he was a cadet during the years 1938-1941 at the Royal Naval College, Dartmouth from the age of thirteen. He went to sea serving first in the battleship Queen Elizabeth in the Mediterranean, and spent the rest of the war at sea - mostly under it, in submarines.
Fullerton's first novel SURFACE! sold over 500,000 copies. Then he worked on the 9-volume Nicholas Everard series that made his reputation.
In 1943 occupied France, life expectancy for a radio operator on the ground is six weeks. SOE agent Rosie Ewing is willing to brave the danger nevertheless. Equipped with forged papers, a transmission set and over a million francs in cash, she is sent to set up a new network in Rouen and identify a potential traitor.
With this set-up, it's no wonder this turned out to be a gripping read that easily sucked me in. However, I did find the protagonist a little too naive.
Newly-widowed Rosie offers her services to SOE as a field agent and finds herself in Northern France, helping to set up a new network after the collapse of the previous one.
I like Rosie as a character, but she seems far too trusting to me as a secret agent in an occupied country. She takes precautions in lots of instances and then completely trusts the wrong person, despite the strange questions and requests to put everything in writing. This isn't her first mission in the field either, which makes it even stranger that she doesn't smell a rat sooner. Or perhaps I'd have been a lot more paranoid in her situation!
The book has exciting moments and a sub-plot involving Rosie's love interest, an Australian in the Royal Navy. It's the first in a series and I'll definitely pick up the next one at some point.
Just re-read this after 5 years. It's better than I remembered ! From the final book in the series I think Mr Fullerton was half in love with Rosie, just like Dorothy L Sayers feel for her character Lord Peter Wimsey. I can see why...
I was drawn to the promise of a strong female spy story. All the parts are there, but since the story is mostly told and not shown, the reader misses out on the full effect. I loved Angel and all of the resistance operatives. I loved the settings ~ the author excelled in describing some places, especially aboard ship. But I was constantly being brought out of the story because of the uneven writing style.
I am intrigued and care enough about the characters to read the next book, but am not dying to get my hands on it right away. It took me a long time to finish this book because I was going through a lot in my own life. It's great escapism and would make a good beach read..