In the heart of war, love is the deadliest weapon. A thriller and epic love story from the bestselling author of Tully, The Bronze Horseman and Light at Lavelle.
It's 1944. The world is at war. Forces of evil hold Europe by the throat.
After a mysterious massacre at sea, a ragtag alliance forms in the heart of occupied Belgium. A handful of Allied soldiers band together with a fearless group of female freedom fighters led by Charlotte Fontaine to carry out a mission no one else can. The unreachable. The ticking. The apocalyptic.
Resolute, hardened by loss - she'll stop at nothing to save the one she loves. Sharp as a blade, he never wanted to lead, but now he's the only one who can finish it. Radiant. Innocent. She dreams of peace, but the war won't let her go. Rebellious, reckless, romantic-and brought to his knees by love.
With time running out, they're hunted by a brilliant and relentless German officer hellbent on their destruction. In a world on fire, it's the unbreakable bonds between the unlikely heroes that make all the difference.
From the master storyteller of The Bronze Horseman comes a thrilling, darkly funny, and heartbreaking epic of love, brotherhood, and sacrifice-when every heartbeat could be your last.
Paullina Simons was born in Leningrad, USSR, in 1963. At the age of ten her family immigrated to the United States. Growing up in Russia Paullina dreamt of someday becoming a writer. Her dream was put on hold as she learned English and overcame the shock of a new culture.
After graduating from university and after various jobs including working as a financial journalist and as a translator Paullina wrote her first novel Tully. Through word of mouth that book was welcomed by readers all over the world.
She continued with more novels, including Red Leaves, Eleven Hours, The Bronze Horseman, The Bridge to Holy Cross (also known as Tatiana and Alexander), The Summer Garden and The Girl in Times Square (also known as Lily). Many of Paullina's novels have reached international bestseller lists.
Apart from her novels, Paullina has also written a cookbook, Tatiana's Table, which is a collection of recipes, short stories and recollections from her best selling trilogy of novels, The Bronze Horseman, The Bridge to Holy Cross, (also known as Tatiana and Alexander) and The Summer Garden.
For the first 100 pages, I told myself "I trust Paullina"
Then, I started being late to everything. I couldn't talk to anyone. I had to finish this book.
A very different Paullina Simons story. I feel like I jumped in to a raging river and was swept away by its strong current- this book was so fast! But brilliant. Action packed.
I am so excited for this…The bronze Horseman by this author is one of my most all time favourite series which has always stayed in my heart, a series I’ve read numerous times. So to see she’s written another war time story, I can’t wait to read it..l
I haven't read a book by Paulina Simons for years (The Bronze Horseman is still one of my favourite books!), but I'm so pleased I picked this one up. I read a review that said it was like a historical novel but with a Guy Ritchie or Quentin Tarantino spin, and that's the perfect description. Great read, amazing characters, absolutely loved it.
Somehow missed the soul of The Bronze Horseman. Couldn't really empathize with the characters except Louise. The good thing about Paullina's writing is that it's never boring. You want to stay till the end of it. The plot was really well done. Wish the characters had been given more flesh too.
Paullina remains the master of the epic historical love story. This one is as sharp and resounding as its title. It hits different - love is only one element, matched by ferocity, friendship, humour, heartbreak, and a game that can have no winners.
This is a cracking story that had me on the edge of my seat for a large chunk of it! It's a Holocaust story, a love story, a cat-and-mouse story, a story of friendship and of doing the right thing - whatever that might be.
Did I love the ending? Jury's out. 🤔 Did I love the fact that the soldiers and the partisans all seems to have an in depth knowledge of poetry at the drop of a hat? Hmmm, it stretched credibility a bit, however lovely it was. Did I really love reading the book? YES!
CW: pretty intimate sexy fun times (but not a huge amount of them), body horror (war)
Whilst this was a well researched historical novel I did find elements of it unsatisfying. Perhaps due to the amount of characters, I found myself not really connecting to any of them. I did find Rheinhardt’s character, the book’s antagonist, quite interesting, and his motivation of power throughout the book contrasting with heroes of our story. This was a book that I found myself consistently googling questions. A lengthy read of nearly 600 pages.
This makes me so sad. The book seems to miss everything that makes a Paullina Simons novel. So many characters, so much technicality. Hard to feel any connection or emotion at all — something that she usually does perfectly. Not sure what changed, but this book was not it for me, sadly. 3 stars is probably being generous. The writing is still strong and the I learned some history. Otherwise, a letdown.
Was thinking maybe 3 1/2 but rounded up to 4 stars. I can be a fan of historical fiction and this was pretty good, the whole everyone taking on love with everyone thing was a bit of an eye roll but it didn't totally dominate the story so it was fine. Not quite the bronze horseman but would still recommend.
This brought me right back to how I felt reading The Bronze Horseman over 10 years ago. Absolutely incredible storytelling by Paullina Simons. I have read dozens of WWII historical fiction books and this one does not disappoint. I stayed up way too late reading it, felt physically anxious and ill for the characters, and couldn’t put it down at the end. I don’t even have words.
Carol read this and thought I might like it too. She was right! Detailed storyteller around the end of WWII in Belgium concerning an unusual group of soldiers and female resistance operatives. Thoroughly enjoyed it and a decent 4.4 from me
So happy to have discovered another historical fiction author I love. This story is set in Belgium during the Second World War — a part of history I haven’t read much about before. I adored the characters, and the story kept me on the edge of my seat throughout
A bit if a different tale for this author, although still in her wheelhouse being set in Europe during WW2. Gave me a bit of ‘the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society’ vibe. An enjoyable holiday read.
Well researched, as Simons’ books always are. It took a while to set the stage but it was a page turner. The love story is secondary to the main plot, so if you’re expecting a Bronze Horseman type of epic love story, this book will probably disappoint you. I’ll admit I’m a hopeless romantic, so the ending could have been better. That’s all I’ll say so as to not give away any spoilers.
I’ve officially become an “I will read anything Paullina Simons writes” kind of reader ever since I finished The Bronze Horseman. So the moment The Bell and the Blade was released, I immediately went into DEAR mode (drop everything and read. ) Never mind that it was over 700 pages long. Never mind that I barely knew what it was about. I simply trusted Paullina Simons, and once again, she did not disappoint.
Set during World War II, this novel initially felt very different from The Bronze Horseman. It seemed heavier on action, espionage, and danger rather than romance, and honestly? I was completely hooked anyway. Then suddenly, right in the middle of all the chaos and life-or-death tension, Paullina gives us romance. And not just romance but the kind that makes your heart race while the war itself is already making your pulse pound. I was swooning and stressed at the exact same time.
I genuinely could not put this book down.
I loved every character …Charlie, Louise, Fletcher, and Fletcher’s entire group. Each of them felt vivid, brave and selfless heroic.
And Paullina Simons truly has a talent for creating heroes you adore just as much as villains you absolutely despise. Von Reinhardt made my blood boil. The kind of villain that makes you want to scream at the pages because he’s just that cruel and infuriating.
One of the most heartbreaking parts for me involved Louise and Grunfell. I won’t spoil anything, but that storyline completely shattered me emotionally.
Readers looking for a perfectly neat “happy ever after” may find this story bittersweet instead. Even Von Reinhardt’s fate feels unsettlingly realistic . That justice is not always satisfying, and sometimes the greatest punishment is simply losing power, influence, and significance.
This was a long, immersive, and emotionally gripping read set in a time when tomorrow was never guaranteed. And in today’s uncertain world, it leaves you reflecting on the value of peace, freedom, and the sacrifices people made to preserve them.
Paullina Simons is my favorite author, and like many other TBH followers, I am incessantly searching for a novel that contains the same emotional and romantic depth. I feel like I am holding my breath while reading every new release by Paullina, hoping for that same feeling I get while reading The Bronze Horseman. The Bell and the Blade did not disappoint, but my tears were shed for love in a different way than they were for Tatiana and Alexander's. I did not emotionally connect with a single character in The Bell and the Blade the way I connected with Tatiana and Alexander, but I did feel a lot more emotional connection to the mission of the characters more than I felt in Light at Lavelle.
The Bell and the Blade is an epic and heartbreaking journey where the romantic element is present, but instead of the story centering around a romantic heartbreak during war, this story centers on a unique mentally and physically exhausting journey around preventing world destruction. Paullina writes masterfully nuanced characters in such a witty way I found myself laughing out loud at their humorous dialogue as if I could actually hear their voices and tones. The dialogue between friends and multiple characters who found romance (I won't spoil those) felt like bonus scenes in an otherwise intense story. The Bell and the Blade is about loyalty, the ultimate courage and sacrifice, listening to your intuition, and paying attention to details. Paullina puts you in scenes where you hold your breath and hold back tears because you so badly want a certain outcome for them, very similar to TBH (just without the romantic depth).
Throughout reading, I found myself researching the history of the A bomb as well as uranium and Europe and America's involvement in Congo and uranium mines. It is clear Paullina Simons conducted her own thorough research to create an incredibly suspenseful story where every character's decision had crucial ripple effects into the future. Each character she created tied to the complex history around African colonialism, the impact on Nazism in Europe, and set the stage for the global need for control of uranium and power heading into the Cold War and beyond. Her characters lived in a specific moment in time, but you after finishing the novel, you can feel their legacy into our present day global and political climate. You can almost see the final remembered name of the Bell suffuse the whole world with her heroism. The tears I shed while reading were for the bell(s) that quietly rang to keep the world from collapsing as well as the deep care and respect the friends had for one another until the very end of their mission.