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Cargando... I Can't Begin to Tell You (2014)por Elizabeth Buchan
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. A fascinating story. Kay and Bror are living in Denmark, running Bror's family estate, Rosenlund. They are now under the occupation of the Germans. Kay is English, and her loyalties are now divided. Kay and Bror have different opinions about how to cope with the occupation - and this makes for very interesting reading, and understanding for the very real difficulties of life at that time. Recommended. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Distinciones
Denmark, 1940. War has come and everyone must choose a side. For British-born Kay Eberstern, living on her husband Bror's country estate, the Nazi invasion and occupation of her adopted country is a time of terrible uncertainty and inner conflict. With Bror desperate to preserve the legacy of his family home, even if it means co-existing with the enemy, Kay knows she cannot do the same. Lured by British Intelligence into a covert world of resistance and sabotage, her betrayal of Bror is complete as she puts her family in danger. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)823.92Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 2000-ValoraciónPromedio:
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British born Kay Eberstern is married to Bror, a Dane and has spent all of her 25 years of married life in Denmark on Bror's country estate bringing up their two, now adult children. When the Germans occupy Denmark she finds herself at odds with Bror as his German ancestry coupled, with his desire to preserve his estate means he is less inclined to take a stand against the occupying force. Meanwhile Kay having been persuaded by her husband's cousin to help a fledgling agent finds herself drawn into a growing web of deceit and resistance that will have consequences for her family she could never have imagined.
I was drawn into this story from the beginning as it was impossible not to warm to Kay and her struggle to come to terms with what is happening to her adopted country. Despite not intending to get involved, her conscience forces her to become a more active player in the resistance. It was interesting to see how the Resistance operated in somewhere other than France, which is the more common setting for war time resistance tales. As well as concentrating on the agent's experiences in Denmark, we have a parallel story of how their messages are received and decoded in Britain by the Intelligence Service.
The sections set in England, to some degree, offer a relief from the tensions in Denmark as we get involved in the daily lives of the girls in the decoding section, and especially Rose. Though I still imparts a fair amount of knowledge on hoe the departments worked - I now know far more than I ever thought I would about Morse code and how the decoders recognized their message senders.
Elizabeth Buchan hasn’t left her writing roots behind completely and there are several budding romances to maintain the interest, just in case the ongoing drama of the war was not enough. I really enjoyed this book, though the twist at the end was not what I anticipated I would happily recommend it and look forward to reading more. I particularly enjoyed the deeper, more intelligent and thoughtful aspect of this novel as opposed to the previous lighter (though no less enjoyable) works.
I received a copy of this title via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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