By Liza Perrat

The French village in which I live originally inspired me for the first novel,
Spirit of Lost Angels, of my French historical trilogy,
The Bone Angel.
An exhibition in a museum in Saint-Martins-en-Haut, a neighbouring
village, gave me the idea to base the second novel of the trilogy,
Wolfsangel, around the French Resistance to the Nazi occupation during WW2.

I realised that this region, like many others in France, was a hotbed of
French resistance. During my research, I was fortunate to speak with
several members of the Resistance, who were only too happy to relive
their days of fighting for the liberation of their country.
But for
further information, I consulted both fiction and non-fiction books on the
subject.
Here are six of my favourites, four non-fiction and two fiction
works, with Goodreads links:
NON-FICTION
by Lucie Aubrac

Lucie Aubrac (1912-2007), of Catholic and peasant background, was a history teacher in Lyon, married to Jewish engineer, Raymond Aubrac, when WW2 broke out.
The couple soon joined the Resistance movement in opposition to the Nazis and their collaborators, and
Outwitting the Gestapo is Lucie’s harrowing account of her participation: of the months when, heavily-pregnant, she planned and took part in raids to free comrades—including her husband, under Nazi death sentence—from Montluc, the prison of Klaus Barbie, infamous Butcher of Lyon.
Her book was also the basis for the 1997 French movie, Lucie Aubrac, which I greatly enjoyed.
by Agnès Humbert

Agnès
Humbert was an art historian in Paris during the German occupation in
1940. Stirred to action by the atrocities she witnessed, she joined
forces with several colleagues to form an organized resistance.
In fact,
their newsletter,
Résistance, gave the French Resistance its name.
During their struggle for freedom, the members of
Humbert’s group were
betrayed to the Gestapo; Humbert herself was imprisoned.
In immediate,
electrifying detail, Humbert describes her resistance against the Nazis,
her time in prison, and the horrors she endured in a string of German
labor camps, always retaining — in spite of everything — hope for
herself, for her friends, and for humanity.
by Vercors
The
Silence of the Sea, written in Nazi-occupied France, is an intensely
dramatic story of an old Frenchman and his niece, and of the German
officer billeted in their house. Both the story, and the circumstances
of its publication, bear eloquent witness to the triumph of the mind of
man over terrible circumstances.
The identity of the author, “Vercors”
is unknown, though he was undoubtedly one of that large number of French
men of letters who, like the old man in “The Silence of the Sea”, refused to compromise with the Nazis in any way.
This novel, written in
mortal peril, published clandestinely in France and smuggled to freedom,
is a real victory for the human spirit, showing that humans have cared
enough for things of the mind to risk their lives to breach the
impenetrable wall of silence the Nazis built around France.
by Anne-Marie Walters

On
a cold, moonlit night in January 1944, Anne-Marie Walters, just twenty
years old, parachuted into southwest France to work with the Resistance
in preparation for the long-awaited Allied invasion.
The daughter of a
British father and a French mother, she was to act as a courier for
George Starr, head of the “Wheelwright” circuit of the Special
Operations Executive. Over the next seven months, Walters crisscrossed
the region, carrying messages, delivering explosives, arranging the
escape of downed airmen, and receiving parachute drops of arms and
personnel in the dead of night, living in constant fear of capture and
torture by the Gestapo.
Then, on the very eve of liberation, she was
sent off on foot over the Pyrenees to Spain, carrying urgent dispatches
for London. It is a tale of high adventure, comradeship and kindness, of
betrayals and appalling atrocities, and of the often unremarked courage
of many ordinary French men and women who risked their lives to help
drive German armies from French soil. And through it all shines her
quiet courage, a keen sense of humor and, above all, her pure zest for
life.
***
FICTION
by Elisabeth Gille

A
haunting and powerful book written by one of the daughters of Irène
Némirovsky, author of
Suite Française. Némirovsky and her husband died
in Nazi concentration camps, but their daughters were hidden and escaped
death.
In this story, Elisabeth Gille gives a
fictionalized account of when, as five-year old Lea Levy, she was hidden
away by the nuns of a Bordeaux convent when the Nazis deported her
parents.
But there is no happy ending for her after the fall of Nazi
Germany, which is what makes this book so powerful, to see the pain and
suffering for the Jews that came after liberation.
by Sebastian Faulks (French Trilogy #3)
Charlotte
Gray is the story of a young Scottish woman who becomes caught up in
the effort to liberate Occupied France from the Nazis while pursuing a
perilous mission of her own.
In blacked-out, wartime
London, Charlotte Gray develops a dangerous passion for a battle-weary
RAF pilot, and when he fails to return from a daring flight into France
she is determined to find him.
In the service of the Resistance, she
travels to the village of Lavaurette, dyeing her hair and changing her
name to conceal her identity. Here she will come face-to-face with the
harrowing truth of what took place during Europe’s darkest years, and
will confront a terrifying secret that threatens to cast its shadow over
the remainder of her days.
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Resistance museum poster |
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Resistance museum poster |