The Paris Agent by Kelly Rimmer

Welcome to my stop on Graydon House’s virtual tour for The Paris Agent by Kelly Rimmer. This book is available on July 11th and you can pre-order or request your library to purchase it now so you can have it on pub day! I’ve read Kelly Rimmer’s books before and love her writing style.

About the Book:

For fans of fast-paced historical thrillers like Our Woman in Moscow and The Rose Code, Rimmer’s brilliant new novel follows three female SOE operatives as their lives intersect in occupied France, and the double agent who controls their fate.

Twenty-five years after the end of the war, an aging Marcel Augustin is reflecting on his life during those perilous, exhilarating years as a British SOE operative in occupied France—in particular the agent who saved his life during a mission gone wrong, whose real name he never knew, nor whether she survived the war. Piqued by her father’s memories, Marcel’s daughter Charlotte begins a search for answers that resurrects the unrest and uncertainty from that period of his life. What follows is the story of Eloise, Josie and Virginia, three otherwise ordinary, average women whose lives intersect in 1943 when they’re called up by the SOE for deployment in France. Taking enormous risks to support the allied troops with very little information or resources, the three women have no idea they’re at the mercy of a double agent within their ranks who's causing chaos within the French circuits, whose efforts will affect the outcome of their lives.

As Charlotte’s search for answers continues, new suspicions are raised about the identity of the double agent, with unsettling clues pointing to her father, and more mysteries are unearthed from the last days of the war about the eventual fates of Eloise, Josie and Virginia.

 

Review:

Told in dual timeline and multiple POV, this is the story of a WWII operative on a journey to find the agent that saved him many years after the war.

I don’t know which timeline (present 1970) or past (WWII) I enjoyed more. The present timeline has discovery, determination, love. The past has love, danger, and doing what is needed to stop the war. The past timeline tells about the agents during the war and how dangerous but necessary it was. I enjoyed everything about this book. You are swept up in the story from the present and given information from the past at the right time. I loved reading this book and did not want to put it down.

 

About the Author:

Kelly Rimmer is the worldwide, New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author of The German Wife, The Warsaw Orphan, and The Things We Cannot Say. She lives in rural Australia with her husband, two children and fantastically naughty dogs, Sully and Basil. Her novels have been translated into more than twenty languages. Please visit her at www.Kelly.Rimmer.com

Keep in touch on social media:

Author website: https://www.kellyrimmer.com/

Facebook: @Kellymrimmer

Twitter: @KelRimmerWrites

Instagram: @kelrimmerwrites

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