After finishing the fifth book of the series, i still have an overall positive opinion of it. I enjoy the spy atmosphere and all the small details of life in Nazi Germany. I appreciate how much research the author did and how hard it must be to bring it to life and join it.
Yet, I am increasingly puzzled at how trusting Clara - and other spies - are with each other. It is borderline alarming to see these people in great danger, sharing their identities, lives and mission with absolute strangers. Except Leo, I often find her romantic interest quite unconvincing and over the top. It is the case on that book too.
The bit with Ian Fleming was a bit too much. I’m very surprised at how he is portrayed a very handsome and so when the pictures online aren’t very flattering. I’m also uncomfortable with how rapey he is depicted. Was his behaviour probably common at the time? Certainly, but in a post metoo era, I would expect some acknowledgement that this behaviour is unacceptable, a call out of sort and there is none of it. I don’t know much about him, but I would have appreciated a note saying that he behaves in such a way. The way it is, sounds like slander about a historical figure for absolutely no reason.
Despite that, I’m looking forward to the next instalment - call me overly romantic but I don’t believe that Leo is really dead.
Originally gave 4 stars and then I remembered that in the depiction of the Dunkirk retreat, ms Thynne mentioned solely the bravery of Englishmen coming to help their soldiers and save them from Germans, completely removing from the narrative the french troupes that actually fought the German army to allow British to escape. In a context of Brexit and rise of nationalism, it is playing well in the national narrative of England saving itself, and is quite concerning coming from an international author.