Two former Allied spies reunite following World War II in a mission against ongoing Nazi activity in Europe and French Guiana.
During the war, American Josie Anderson and Frenchwoman Arlette LaRue lived together in Paris—along with Arlette’s young son, Willie—and worked as spies. They sent information on Nazi communications to the Allied forces in London and were so successful that they were known across Europe as the Golden Doves. Then they were caught and sent to the Ravensbrück concentration camp. Now, seven years after the end of the war, they are each immersed in new work: Josie is working for U.S. Army intelligence in Fort Bliss, Texas, as part of Operation Paperclip, interviewing former Nazi scientists to determine if their work would be useful in the knowledge race against the Soviet Union, and Arlette is working at a cafe in Paris and searching for Willie, from whom she was separated at Ravensbrück. The friends cross paths on an unexpected joint mission when Josie is sent to Europe to track down the notorious Dr. Snow, who led experiments on women—including Josie’s mother—at the camp, and Arlette travels to French Guiana to visit an organization caring for war orphans on a tip that her son might be there. Kelly’s latest work of historical fiction revisits Ravensbrück, the German concentration camp for women that featured in her bestselling debut novel, Lilac Girls, and explores the long-term effects of the war and the ethical consequences of Operation Paperclip. In alternating first-person sections that move over a seven-year-period, Josie and Arlette narrate their experiences in detailed and evocative prose, though the story takes a while to get going given its efforts to develop a detailed backstory as well as a complicated plot.
A compelling portrayal of turmoil both personal and global.