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Lucie Aubrac: The French Resistance Heroine Who Defied the Gestapo

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The full story of a remarkable woman who has become legendary in the history of the French Resistance. In May 1943, a young Frenchwoman called Lucie Aubrac engineered the escape of her husband Raymond from the clutches of Klaus Barbie, the feared Gestapo chief later known as the 'Butcher of Lyon'. When Raymond was arrested again that June, Lucie mounted a second astonishing rescue, ambushing the prison van that was transporting him. Spirited out of France with her husband by the RAF, she arrived in London a heroine. However, in 1983 Klaus Barbie made the bombshell claim that the Aubracs had become informers in 1943, betraying their comrades. The French press and the couple themselves furiously denounced this 'slander', but as worrying inconsistencies were spotted in Lucie's story, doubts emerged that have never quite gone away.?? Who was Lucie Aubrac? What did she really do in 1943? And was she truly the spirit of la vraie France, or a woman who could not resist casting herself as a heroine, whatever the cost to the truth??? Siân Rees' penetrating account is the first full English-language biography of this extraordinary woman.

258 pages, Kindle Edition

First published June 25, 2015

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About the author

Siân Rees

23 books26 followers
Siân Rees is a British author and historian. She has a degree in history from University of Oxford. She lives in Brighton and is an RLF Fellow at the University of Sussex. She is particularly interested in the social and maritime history of the 17th and 18th centuries.

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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for Wendy.
2,371 reviews45 followers
June 27, 2016
In "Lucie Aubrac: The French Resistance Heroine Who Outwitted the Gestapo" which I won through Goodreads Giveaways, Siân Rees brings to life a gripping and insightful account of the life of a heroine who served as a courier and saboteur during the German occupation in an attempt to help resist and expel the Nazis. In 1943 after her husband Raymond Aubrac a senior officer in the Resistance's "Secret Army" is imprisoned and brutally interrogated Lucie devises a crafty rescue plan only to be expelled twice from Klaus Barbie "the Butcher of Lyon's", office before initiating an explosive rescue after ambushing the prison van. With Raymond wounded physically as well as emotionally, their young son whisked away from under the noses of the Gestapo who would use him as a pawn, Lucie and her family stay hidden until the RAF sweeps them away to England where they continue the fight.

Set in France after a crippling defeat at the Maginot Line splits the nation in two, the country is faced with an Occupied Zone, and a Free Zone where eighty-four Marshal Pétain a fascist puppet has set up his government in Vichy. Siân Rees's novel illustrates the dark years of a France struggling with deprivation, financial problems and the persecution of Jews their hope kept alive with the rise of the Resistance and the optimism in a newspaper carried by women past German soldiers in baby carriages. Well-researched from letters, newspaper articles, historical documents and interviews the author searches for the truth about a heroine who years later would have her name and deeds besmirched. because of inconsistencies in her story. This historical account like Siân Rees's writing style flows smoothly and effortlessly and reads like a fictional story exemplifying Lucie's patriotism, and daring, her spirit of resistance and love of family.

Lucie Aubrac (aka Lucie Samuel) who yearned to graduate from Sorbonne University and joined a Communist Youth group wanting social reform and a redistribution of resources but not a totalitarian state is a determined, strong-willed and enthusiastic young woman. Her younger years defined by movement, parental absence and hardship, she tends to fabricate details about her early life as she grows older. Rebellious, unpredictable, excitable and bold, it is these characteristics that not only lead her into danger, but sparks her heroism and wins the hearts of her friends in the Resistance. In contrast Raymond Aubrac (aka Samuel) born into the wealth of a Jewish merchant family is thoughtful, engaging, cool and temperate. It is these traits that make him invaluable in the Resistance Movement and a help in the reconstruction process after the war.

"Lucie Aubrac: The French Resistance Heroine Who Outwitted the Gestapo" is a thrilling portrait of a fearless and brave woman who dearly loved her husband, family and country and would do anything to protect them. I thoroughly enjoyed and highly recommend it.
769 reviews4 followers
September 2, 2016
This engagingly written story of a French resistant and her husband has a title that is somewhat of a misnomer. It is focused more on the difficulties of unifying the various, mostly communist underground factions to work together against their common enemy, the Nazi occupiers and the puppet Vichy government, and less so on outwitting the Gestapo. It is interesting that even before the war ended, this fragile unity of purpose fell apart and continued to fracture as time went on.
Profile Image for Judy Gacek.
309 reviews3 followers
September 12, 2016
Well written. Sheds light on the different factions of the resistance in France during WWII and the part the Aubrac's played in fighting the Germans.
96 reviews1 follower
December 22, 2019
Excellent

This is a beautiful, tragic and compelling book that was a joy to read. I was fascinated with the depth of the history learned here but even more so by the details pertaining to the incredible life of Lucie Aubrac, her husband and their families, friends and colleagues. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
458 reviews11 followers
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October 9, 2023
I received this book in a Goodreads giveaway. (Thank you.) This is about a French resistance operative. I found it interesting, but not fully engaging. It started slow for me but got better towards the middle. I didn't dislike the book, I've just read others about similar subjects that made me want to learn more than this one did.
9 reviews
December 8, 2020
Lucie Aubrac was a non-controversial figure who died a heroine of France and the French Resistance. Decorated by Presidents of the Republic, a personal acquaintance of de Gaulle, she and her husband Raymond were communists who gradually through the war grew closer to the unifying feature of a Resistance network that would be representative of all French people. Lucie gained her reputation as a resister when her husband was in prison, taken by the Millice and defended by his pseudonym. Remarkably they had not comprehended that he was not Raymond Vallet as he had claimed. The interrogators and Gestapo were unaware who they had in custody. According to Lucie's version of events she concocted a plan with her colleagues to go to the jail to plead as Lucie Montet to plead for her fiance. She managed to arrange to get married in a civil registry office; this unremarkable event caused his transportation to another location. Lucie was told of her husband's whereabouts and as the van holding the prisoners moved out they were ambushed by Resistance fighters. The escape plan carried her and her newly released husband south to a number of doctors and safe houses until they managed to get a lift from a RAF piloted plane that came into the mountains to rescue them. In London they were feted by the Free French community for the intelligence information; debriefed by British Secret Services they received plaudits for the amount of data they carried. Not obliged to return to France she later worked at the BBC in the foreign broadcasts department. On their return they were awarded the Croix de Guerre, living a long and happy retirement. Historians challenged the veracity of her escape and suspected her when she declared that it was Rene Hardy, a resistance fighter who had betrayed them to Gestapo. In spite of this Lucie ensured by giving many interviews and writing books that her family reputation would remain uppermost in the mind of veterans. On balance she is believed as being truthful. A well-written book by a young Oxford-educated historian who shows in good English how Lucie's books have been completely translated into a 21st world of universal accounts covering the whole canon of the Resistance history of the era. Replete with footnotes and bibliography it is one of many books that now focus on women's role in the French Resistance.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Allyson.
743 reviews
February 28, 2017
I had already read Outwitting The Gestapo so aside from the final discussion about the many accusations leveled against the Aubracs, I felt I was reading a less interesting version of her autobiography.
That is not completely fair to the author as her recounting was more wide ranging but it prevented me from rating it more highly.
Profile Image for Melisende.
1,228 reviews146 followers
March 3, 2018
The story of a French Resistance leader and her husband who were accused by Klaus Barbie (Butcher of Lyon) as being Nazi informers.

I was left with many questions after reading this account of the wartime activities of these two that involved escape, torture, rescues. Was Lucie really a resistance hero or was the life she claimed merely a fantasy. Were she and Raymond both collaborators or was this just a malicious piece of last minute rumour-mongering by Klaus Barbie at his trial in 1983?

More compelling was reading of the lives led by Lucie and Raymond after the war, and their need to justify their wartime role even in their last years.
40 reviews1 follower
July 7, 2016
I received this book from a GoodReads giveaway. I love reading about WWII, this is a good book, well written but not an easy read.
1,582 reviews30 followers
July 17, 2016
Very factual book about Lucie and her husband - and their lives and times with the French Resistance. It was very informative.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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