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Twee moedige vrouwen

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Engeland, 1937. Als Adelaide ontdekt dat de man die haar heeft opgevoed niet haar vader is, staat haar leven op zijn kop. Ze gaat op zoek naar haar andere familie en komt uit bij de zus van haar vader, die moeder-overste is van een klooster in Frankrijk. Adelaide reist naar haar toe op zoek naar antwoorden, en er groeit al snel een band tussen haarzelf en haar tante.

Frankrijk, 1941. Midden in de Tweede Wereldoorlog gaat Adelaide terug naar Frankrijk – nu als spion. Met de hulp van haar tante en enkele van de andere nonnen probeert ze zo veel mogelijk mensen te redden van de Duitsers. Maar dat is gevaarlijk werk, en niet iedereen is te vertrouwen…

400 pages, Paperback

First published April 1, 2009

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About the author

Diney Costeloe

33 books659 followers
Encouraged by my publisher father, I have been writing all my life. When I was five, he took my first effort to his office and brought it back in a cardboard cover with the label, 'Tom's Party'written by Diney, published by Daddy.
I've never looked back and always have some writing on the go.
To date I have written 10 romantic novels under the name of Diney Delancey (I liked the shape of the name and it sounded like a romantic novelist) and four novels as Diney Costeloe.
All are also in large print and several recently published as e-books.
See my reviews on Amazon and on my website, http://www.dineycosteloe.co.uk or http://castlehavenbooks.co.uk

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5 stars
3,580 (48%)
4 stars
2,710 (36%)
3 stars
868 (11%)
2 stars
192 (2%)
1 star
91 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 364 reviews
Profile Image for Erin.
3,896 reviews466 followers
August 31, 2025
I believe that if author Diney Costeloe had only written about French Catholic nuns saving Jewish families and British airmen, this would have been a 5-star read. A strange statement because it took me a while to wade through the first three chapters. But chapter 4 revved me up, and I was loving this story. It was Adelaide, the Reverend Mother's niece and her sweeping romance with a member of the French Resistance that ultimately killed the buzz. Because that story has been taken out and resurrected so many times, and we all just need to step back and LET. IT. GO. As my grandmother likes to say, "Your generation eyes mine and thinks the moment we saw a soldier, our dress was up around our necks."

So I guess what my darling grandmother wants me to keep in mind is that it was war, and it wasn't pretty. And it was no Hollywood romance. So, I must say that DC makes us realize the fear of the people under German occupation, the courage of the sisters, the cowardice of neighbours, but then sticks Adelaide in as a distraction. That being said, it wasn't the worst book.


Goodreads 10/11/17 * Revisions made 31/08/25
Profile Image for Anne OK.
4,098 reviews553 followers
March 25, 2016
It seems I’ve slipped into a pattern lately of reading historical fiction novels set during the Second World War era. A recent recommendation from a friend once again sent me quickly back to Amazon to one-click. I got very lucky – the book was on sale for $1.99, and the author has obviously done her research and it’s reflected realistically in the details. Diney Costelloe delivers a well researched fictional depiction of the forces and harrowing cruelties of war and the actions of the brave and courageous unsung heroes and heroines during the French Resistance.

When Adelaide learns that the man she believed to be her father her entire life isn’t, of course she’s shocked. With a need to know more about a family she’s never met, she ends up on the doorstep of Our Lady of Mercy convent to meet the Reverend Mother, her aunt. As France falls into the hands of the brutal Nazi Reign of Terror, shadow fighters including Adelaide and the nuns of St. Croix risk their lives out of courage and a sense of common humanity assisting, sheltering and saving the lives of the Jewish people and the Jewish orphans in their countryside village.

This is a compelling novel filled with many surprising twists, and is enriched with a diverse cast of characters. With both a surprise at the end and an epilogue, I felt generously rewarded with yet another exceptional look back into history.

Profile Image for Abi Gurden.
30 reviews
December 9, 2015
This story hooked me in quickly and kept me reading avidly. It would have won five stars were it not for the rather hurried ending which felt like an 'optional add on', as if the author had run out of story and just tacked this epilogue on the end to wind it up rather than just leaving things hanging in mid air. Bringing the ending into the beginning would have made a much neater and much more enjoyable book - if an elderly lady is talking to a reporter with her grandson in the epilogue, start the book out in the same way, so that the story that spins out explains why the reporter is there!
Other than this, the book reads well, there are no jaw-gritting grammar errors for example, and the characters are well-rounded and explored, making them believable. The story itself has many nail-biting moments and I found myself unable to put the book down at times, unable to do so until I knew the fate of certain characters.
If you enjoy historical fiction, fiction based around WW2 or resistance-movements, then you'd enjoy this book. It is NOT a religious book and religion is not 'pushed' at the reader in any way - it's about people and the horrific situation they found themselves in.
I had this as a Kindle reduced price, but I would pay more. However it's not quite good enough for me to purchase a second paper copy to keep 'forever'.
1,062 reviews107 followers
December 16, 2020
Engeland, 1937. Op haar 21e verjaardag ontdekt Adelaide dat de man die haar heeft opgevoed niet haar biologische vader is. Ze gaat op zoek naar andere familieleden en ontdekt dat haar tante de moeder-overste is van een klooster in Frankrijk. Ze gaat op pad om meer te ontdekken over haar verleden.

Haar tante Sarah, moeder Marie-Pierre, leerde je in Costeloe’s vorige boek ‘De verloren vader’ kennen, toen zij als jonge vrouw tijdens de Eerste Wereldoorlog naar Frankrijk vertrok om gewonde soldaten te verzorgen. Dit boek is volledig losstaand te lezen, maar het is wel extra leuk als je die geschiedenis al kent en nu dit personage terugziet en beter leert kennen.

Twee jaar na hun eerste ontmoeting breekt de Tweede Wereldoorlog uit en neemt het klooster enkele kinderen op, wat het begin vormt van het verzet vanuit het klooster. Even later wordt Adelaide als spion gestationeerd in het dorp waar het klooster staat, waarop ze zich inzet om zoveel mogelijk mensen te helpen vluchten door een ontsnappingslijn op te zetten. Een gevaarlijke onderneming, want niet alleen worden er regelmatig invallen gedaan door de nazi’s, ook binnen in het klooster is niet iedereen het eens met dit verzet.

In ‘Twee moedige vrouwen’ zet Diney Costeloe een realistisch, meeslepend, emotioneel en spannend verhaal neer over het leven tijdens de Tweede Wereldoorlog en de onderdrukking door de bezetter. Het laat goed zien welke angsten de mensen hadden, wat allemaal werd afgepakt, het voedsel dat werd geconfisqueerd, invallen die gedaan werden, mishandelingen en verraad. Tegelijkertijd laat het de kracht en het doorzettingsvermogen zien van iedereen die zich inzette voor het verzet.

Het is erg vlot geschreven en het verhaal gaat op sommige punten vrij snel, maar je wordt meegenomen in alle ontwikkelingen en het verhaal blijft boeien. Hoewel het einde vrij abrupt is, er wat toevalligheden in het boek voorkomen en de liefdesrelatie voor mij niet heel veel toevoegde aan het verhaal, zijn de personages en de sfeerbeschrijvingen goed uitgewerkt en is dit zeker een erg mooie en indrukwekkende historische roman over twee krachtige en moedige vrouwen!
12 reviews
January 4, 2016
The Sisters of St. Croix

I read these books in order beginning with The Lost Soldier (The Ashgrove) and found them absolutely fascinating. I could not put them down and willingly give them five stars. The story moves at a great pace and is extremely frightening at times. I don't know if the next book (which I have already bought) carries the story on but I can't wait to find out. You will not be disappointed in this author.
Profile Image for Margaret Crampton.
277 reviews52 followers
September 19, 2016
This is a gripping book about the Nazi occupation of France and the bravery and resourcefulness of the French Resistance told through the eyes of a young English girl who was dropped in France and joined the Resistance to spy for the Allies. Much of the action takes place in the convent of the sisters of St Croix who bravely harbor Jews and a British airman. Not all
Live to tell the tale. This book will keep
You reading through the night. 5 Stars
Profile Image for Eileen.
454 reviews99 followers
February 6, 2017
Stories of the French Resistance continue to draw me in, and this is yet another one to earn high marks! The Sisters of St Croix focused on the courageous role played by a group of nuns during the war. A page turner it was, and I raced along, wondering whether I'd find a note at the end indicating that the novel was based on actual events. There was no such indication, to my vague disappointment. However, the story unfolded convincingly in dual time zones, with plenty of suspense, and a satisfying ending. It could have happened! A slight criticism might be that at times the action and resulting outcomes were a bit too neat, but I didn’t find that bothersome.


This author's fiction seems to be set frequently during the period of the two world wars. She feels it's important that the horror and sacrifice of those times should never be forgotten. How very true!
Profile Image for Vicki Willis.
1,047 reviews76 followers
July 30, 2020
This was a great historical fiction novel. It took place during WWII in France. It was about a woman who was trained for the resistance and how she made a difference. What really made this one interesting is that one of the settings was a convent and how the sisters were involved. Of course knowing the history of this time, the story was tragic. There were some extremely graphic and disturbing scenes. The pages flew by and it was a very emotional and touching book. The characters were ones you could root for and seemed realistic to me. Recommended!
Profile Image for Anoeska Nossol.
Author 3 books60 followers
March 7, 2021
In het boek 'twee moedige vrouwen' maakt de lezer kennis met, hoe kan het ook anders, twee vrouwen die tijdens de Tweede Wereldoorlog aansluiten bij het verzet. Een non die -in eerste instantie- onbewust het goede wil doen en een Engelse die als spion gaat werken. Beide proberen ze benadeelden te redden en uit handen van de Duitsers te houden.

Het verhaal op zich was zeer spannend. Er zijn verschillende scènes waar je als lezer helemaal mee wordt gezogen in het verhaal en op het puntje van je stoel zit. Vooral de manier van vertellen maakt dat je emotioneel betrokken geraakt bij het verhaal. Je gaat als lezer een bepaalde waarde hechten aan de personages. In dit geval zelfs aan de nevenfiguren.
Dit weergeeft dat het boek ijzersterke personages bevat. Het is oprecht een boek waarbij de personages levensecht worden. Dit komt deels ook door een correcte historische achtergrond. De plot op zich is eerder fictie, maar de setting klopt met de tijdsgeest en het gebeuren. Soms mocht de setting wel net wat meer aangedikt worden om de sfeer van bepaalde plekken wat meer naar voren te brengen.
De schrijfstijl is eenvoudig en toegankelijk voor elk type lezer. Dit maakt het boek voor een breed publiek interessant.

Er is weinig op te merken aan het boek. Diney Costeloe is een auteur waarvan ik al enkele boeken las. Steeds vond ik het sterk... tot er net één element het verpestte: slechte research, vluchtig einde en noem maar op. Dit maal klopte het plaatje wel en blijf dat sterke element bestaan. Dit maakte dat ik het een prachtig boek vond en ook voor het eerst in tijden kan zeggen dat ik genoten heb van één van Dineys verhalen zonder ergernissen te moeten ervaren.
Profile Image for Angmdc.
87 reviews
October 20, 2016
Great read, and really enjoyed this author. Looking forward to her other books
Profile Image for Sherry Sharpnack.
1,020 reviews38 followers
March 19, 2019
This was quite the beach read! I literally got a bit of a sunburn b/c I didn’t want to put down the story until I finished it!

Adelaide is a wealthy English girl celebrating her twenty-first birthday as the book opens, in 1937. She receives a letter from an attorney’s office in London that changes her life, and gives her a family she didn’t know she had. Adelaide decides to visit her “new to her” aunt, a nun in a convent in northwestern France.

Flash forward a bit, and the Nazis have rolled over France. Adelaide’s Aunt, better known as Mother Marie-Pierre, runs the convent now and helps a family of refugee children whose mother is killed by a strafing plane. A kind refugee drops them off at the convent. Mother M-P risks her life, and the convent’s, by taking the children to Amiens to a sympathetic priest who gets the children placed. The baby will never even know that she is actually Jewish!

Adelaide decides to join the war effort, and her fluent French enables her to be trained as a spy. She is accidentally assigned to the same portion of France as the convent, in order to help local pockets of French resistance. The convent helps a down English airman escape, so the English think the nuns will help. In a disappointing turn of events, they don’t want to help b/c of harassment from the local Nazis and even dissension among the nuns themselves, b/c one of the nuns gets sent to an internment camp. Adelaide goes ahead and gets the convent involved, although her aunt doesn’t know about it. This gets pretty intense and quite the roller coaster ride. Does Adelaide save the local Jewish family? Does Mother M-P help after all? Do they all even survive? Read it and see.

I will say that there were a lot of people who suffered terrible reprisals at the hands of the Nazis in this story. At what point is it worth it to risk untold lives in order to try to save one family? This book left me w/ that question to ponder...
Profile Image for Aoife.
1,483 reviews652 followers
July 4, 2018
I received a free copy of this book from Head of Zeus in exchange for an honest review.

It's the middle of WW2, and the nuns in a convent in the French town of St Croix have to deal with the suffocating effect of the invading Germans, and the Nazi officer who is determined to break them. But this doesn't stop them from helping Jewish children and families in need, In the middle of this, the Mother Superior's niece arrives from England in the disguise of a French villager, and she is ready to help arrange transport of stranded pilots back home.

This was a fantastically-written, evocative and atmospheric novel that will have you feeling all the feelings!I was immediately entranced into this book even though it started off a few years prior to the war with Adelaide discovering the truth about her biological father and traveling to meet her aunt. Adelaide was genuinely so wonderfully British and I loved it about her. She was educated, polite and stoic and her later role in the war proved her to be capable, strong and brave as well.

There were characters in this book (the Germans mostly but also some of the nuns) that had me feeling a level of hatred I didn't know I possessed. I've read some books with terrible characters int eh past but for some reason, this book in particularly had me enraged when certain characters would of things to people or harass the nuns and it drove me nuts but in a good way as it just kept me reading to see what happened.

This book is fiction but there are so many true stories of wartime bravery similar to what happened in the novel that can turly take your breath away. Seeing the danger that Adelaide, Marcel, Sarah and the other sisters put themselves into save others and knowing real people were once in those situations and did those incredible things take your breath away.
96 reviews
May 6, 2017
Great historical fiction!

The story is rather divided into two stories in one. First is Adelaide, who finds she isn't who she thinks she is. Finding her father is her step-father, and her biological father was killed in the war. Now there is another war, and Adelaide is off to help those in her new family who are in occupied France. The there are the Sisters at St. Croix convent where Adelaide's aunt is Mother Superior. They want to help people as much as possible in this war. The stories intermingle, sometimes a little confusingly, but it's all clear soon. Almost TOO realistic.
Profile Image for Jeanne.
1,050 reviews4 followers
March 20, 2019
I love this author -- what a treasure! Never thought I would like historical fiction, but this author does such a great job! Another horrifying tale of the Nazis unbelievable treatment of the Jews and the amazing people who tried to harbor the Jews from the terror of it all. Unbelievable courage by many in a small village in France, it offset a bit of the bad with the kindness of the human spirit! Well done -- 9 out of 10.
Profile Image for Nancy.
845 reviews
April 15, 2017
I've never read anything by this author and was a little put off by the cover, which made the story look a little fluffy, but I really liked this book! It's a story about the French resistance in WWII. I've read several similarly-themed books the past few years, but this was different. It was well written and not predictable. I'm going to try another by this author.
Profile Image for Maureen.
496 reviews208 followers
August 24, 2018
This story was wonderful of course it is based on the horrific German occupation in France. This is the story of brave people and what they had to endure. I loved the story of Adelaide and the choices that she made. The bravery of the Sisters in the convent was also unbelievable how they tried to help the people of St Croix.
Profile Image for Tracey.
3,003 reviews76 followers
February 28, 2019
This has been a very enjoyable read , though heartbreaking at times.
I love reading about times in France with the British going out to work with the resistance in the Second World War.
What I liked about this book was that it had many voices to tell the story but never felt confusing as all the characters were so integral to the plot .
Profile Image for Martina.
421 reviews10 followers
January 10, 2021
Wauw.... mijn 1e boek van 2021! Het is echt te mooi!! Als ik nog nooit iets van Costeloe had gelezen, had ik op slag fan geweest!! Nou was ik al fan, maar ongelooflijk.... wat een fantastisch verhaal weer. Absolute aanrader!!!
Profile Image for Suzanne.
1,239 reviews17 followers
March 13, 2021
Another awesome book by this lady. This one was sad because of the war and the atrocities that happened. It seemed that it was close to what happened. There were some inspirational people in this time. I’m glad she could write about it.
Profile Image for Rebecca Vanblois.
47 reviews1 follower
December 1, 2021
What a gripping, page turner this book was. A beautiful and also horrific story at times, about the German occupation in France. The common people and nuns at a convent who tried to save the innocent Jewish familes and neighbors. So sad and also inspiring. I could not put it down!!
Profile Image for Kinsey Crosby.
87 reviews
June 14, 2017
Oh my god. I am currently learning about the Holocaust and WW2 so reading this was quite hard hitting but at the same time it was very intriguing learning about how life was in a nazi occupied area.
6 reviews
July 19, 2018
I could not put the book down. Well written.
Profile Image for Demi Stein.
590 reviews33 followers
January 14, 2022
Dit boek geluisterd via Bookchoice, maar bizar lang over gedaan, omdat ik eigenlijk alleen tijdens het reizen luisterde. Inmiddels ook tijdens wandelingen en ik wil het tijdens het huishouden gaan doen. Door het tijdens het wandelen te doen, eindelijk deze week deze uitgeluisterd. Omdat ik er zo lang over gedaan heb, ben ik een aantal dingen vergeten. Het is wel een indrukwekkend verhaal en een aanrader voor liefhebbers van oorlogs/holocaust verhalen. Hier komt verder geen recensie van online.
Profile Image for Karen Danielson.
428 reviews
February 21, 2024
For me it felt like 2 different books. The first part set in England and the second part set in France. It would have been more interesting if Costeloe had intertwined the two a lot more. I liked it enough to finish it but it’s predictable and forgettable.
40 reviews
June 11, 2021
Super spannend!
Ik kon mijn aandacht eerst niet zo vast houden. Maar ik wist, na het lezen van Diney Castloe haar andere boeken, dat dat nog wel eens zou kunnen komen. En dat was zo. 😁
140 reviews2 followers
October 29, 2020
Prachtig boek maar dat was te verwachten van deze schrijfster
Intens dappere vrouwen die in het verzet zaten
Mooi verhaal en moeilijk weg te leggen
Profile Image for Veronique Wilbrink.
542 reviews17 followers
January 26, 2021
Twee moedige vrouwen is een los te lezen vervolg op ‘De verloren vader’. Ik moet eerlijk bekennen dat ‘De verloren vader’ mijn aandacht niet vast wist te houden en die heb ik destijds ook aan de kant gelegd om op een later tijdstip nog eens opnieuw te lezen. Dus de link die gelegd wordt tussen de boeken kan ik niet beamen. Echter kan ik wel zeggen dat ‘Twee moedige vrouwen’ heel goed losstaand te lezen is. Het is een verhaal, waar bij je de kennis van het boek ‘De verloren vader’ niet nodig hebt. Hier was ik wel blij om, want ik kwam er pas later achter dat Sarah al eerder een rol in ‘De verloren vader’ gespeeld had.

Maar nu naar het boek ‘Twee moedige vrouwen’. Het boek begint met het verhaal van Adelaide op de dag dat ze 21 wordt. Ze krijgt dan een brief van een notaris waardoor haar leven op de kop komt te staan. Je merkt tijdens het lezen meteen dat er veel liefde is voor haar oma, grand-mère. Adelaide spreekt met haar grand-mère altijd Frans en dit geeft haar enkele voordelen in de oorlog.

Costeloe weet ook nu weer een realistisch verhaal neer te zetten. Door de beeldende schrijfstijl waan je je tijdens het lezen ook echt in de gebieden die Costeloe omschrijft in haar boek. Dit zorgt ervoor dat je nog meer meeleeft met het verhaal. Ik merkte tijdens het lezen dat ik echt soms op het puntje van mijn stoel zat omdat ik bang was dat het mis zou gaan en de Duitsers het zouden ontdekken.

De titel van het boek is ‘Twee moedige vrouwen’, echter denk ik dat in dit boek meer moedige vrouwen voorbij komen en ik wellicht sommige personages nog moediger vond, dan de twee die met de titel bedoeld worden.

Het boek laat wel duidelijk de gruweldaden van de Duitsers in de oorlog zien, hoe ze in het bezette gebied op rooftocht gingen, namen wat ze wilden, mishandelingen die ‘zomaar’ uitgevoerd werden en invallen die te pas en onpas uitgevoerd werden. Als je eenmaal op de radar van de bezetters zat, kwam je hier ook niet meer vanaf. Wel was duidelijk tijdens het lezen dat er ook bij de bezetters personen waren die het niet op die manier wilden aanpakken. Dat lees je eigenlijk in alle oorlogsverhalen dat niet alle bezetters slecht waren. Er zijn ook bezetters die niks tegen de joden hadden en de bevolking op een fatsoenlijke manier behandelde.

Het boek was weer een plezier om te lezen, vooral om te lezen wat het verzet toch allemaal voor elkaar kreeg. Het boek was voor mijn gevoel ook veel te snel uit en ik kijk dan ook weer uit naar een volgend boek van Diney Costeloe.

Deze recensie is eerder verschenen op Koukleum.nl.
31 reviews
March 1, 2019
An Amazing Story

This book started tame enough but soon it became apparent it was anything but. Adele grew up thinking the man in her life was her father but up in his death found out he was her step father. She set out to find some of her real father's relatives bringing her to a convent where his sister was the Mother Superior. At their visit she also found her great aunt was there. Soon the country was caught up in war and wanting to take an active part she trained for undercover work and was assigned to the region near the convent. This soon became a book I didn't want to put down yet I didn't want to continue with fearing what might get happen . Most intriguing and a must read for a better understanding of the war.
174 reviews1 follower
July 28, 2017
This story hooked me in quickly and kept me reading avidly. It is more like a 3.5 rating which I wish Good Reads would let me do. Definitely would recommend this book.

Stories of the French Resistance and World War Two/ Holocaust continue to draw me in, and this is yet another one to earn high marks! The Sisters of St Croix focused on the courageous role played by a group of nuns during the war. A page turner it was, and I raced along, wondering whether I'd find a note at the end indicating that the novel was based on actual events. There was no such indication, to my vague disappointment.
Well researched
Displaying 1 - 30 of 364 reviews

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