I would like to thank NetGalley and HenschelHAUS Publishing for the opportunity to read this book in exchange for an honest review.
So, to be totally honest, I didn't know anything about Edith Cavell before I came across this book. I read the description, thought it seemed interesting, and so I set out to read it. And having read it now, I definitely feel that I have missed out on not being more familiar with what was an obviously extraordinary woman. For those not familiar with her, she was a British WWI nurse who helped smuggle hundreds, if not thousands, of Allied troops out of Belgium under the noses of the Germans in occupied Brussels. New evidence has also come up to show that she was part of a British spy network. But she also never faltered in her duties as a nurse, and cared for any wounded soldier who came her way, whether he was British or French or German.
The book was obviously meticulously researched, and much of the information included was taken from Edith's own writings. I did a little basic research before reading the book, and I feel like the author did a good job making Edith into a person, and not just the martyr you imagine her to be. The strenuous life of a Nightingale nurse, the way Edith managed to overcome her fears, her courage in the face of her own death -- all was illustrated beautifully. Towards the end, though, she seemed to get... well, stupid. She was taking risks and making decisions that made me want to scream. It was as if she was completely cavalier about the risk of imprisonment or death at the hands of the Germans. It was extremely frustrating. I don't know if this was true in Edith's actual life, or if it was a liberty taken with the author, but I often wanted to just shake some sense into her.
My one complaint is that once she had actually been captured by the Germans, the book slowed down considerably. Perhaps it's because we all know what's going to happen -- Edith is going to be executed by the Germans, causing international outrage -- so it's hard to really build suspense, but I just didn't feel that section was as tense and nerve-wracking and scary as I had thought it would be. Her courage in the face of a death sentence, however, was done very well, as well as her strength in her faith. And the scene of her actual execution I thought was written beautifully, in a way that I think really paid tribute to Edith well, without being too gratuitous or violent (surprisingly enough).
Overall, I enjoyed this book, and would recommend it to anyone interested in nursing, World War I, or just exceptional people in history.