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The Woman With No Name by Audrey Blake: A Book Review

The Woman With No Name

Author: Audrey Blake

Genre: Historical Fiction 

Publisher: Sourcebooks Landmark 

Publication Date: 2024

Pages: 383

Source: Netgalley/Publisher in exchange for an honest review 

Synopsis: Older, diminutive, overlooked…she becomes one of the most ferocious and feared espionage agents in the are against the Nazis.


      World War II London, 1942.Though she survived the bomb that destroyed her home, Yvonne Rudellat's life is over. She's estranged from her husband, her daughter is busy with war work, and Yvonne—older, diminutive, overlooked—has lost all purpose. Until she's offered a chance to remake herself entirely…


      The war has taken a turn for the worse, and the men in charge are desperate. So, when Yvonne is recruited as Britain's first female sabotage agent, expectations are low. But her tenacity, ability to go unnoticed, and aptitude for explosives set her apart. Soon enough she arrives in occupied France with a new identity, ready to set the Nazi regime ablaze.


       But there are adversaries on all sides. As Yvonne becomes infamous as the nameless, unstoppable woman who burns the enemy at every turn, she realizes she may lose herself to the urgent needs of the cause…


      Based on a true story, The Woman With No Name is a gripping story of secrets, spies, and the women behind the Resistance, from USA Today bestselling author Audrey Blake.


      My Review: The Woman With No Name tells the story of women behind the Resistance movement during WWII. Yvonne’s marriage is at a breaking point, and she is becoming distant with her daughter. When a bomb destroys her house in London, her marriage has ended and her daughter has joined the war effort. Yvonne felt as if she lost all sense of purpose to her life. One day, she is recruited to become the first female sabotage agent. She is trained and sent to France to destroy the Nazis.


     Yvonne was a character that I should have loved and sympathized with. She was a woman from a broken family and had lost all hope in life. Her hope was restored when she was given a mission and a purpose. She was very determined to prove herself and worked very hard. She showed her male colleagues that a woman is just as competent as a male. She was truly a strong woman. Therefore, she had all the makings for me to root for. However, I did not feel anything for her as a character. She seemed flat and emotionally distant. I could not connect with her, and  I was not engaged with her story.


      Overall, this book is about hope, second chances, and war. I thought all of the characters were one dimensional and flat. There were many drawn out scenes that seemed unnecessary. I also did not like how the book was written. The novel was told from multiple perspectives, and the story kept switching from the past to the present. I think it would have been more enjoyable if Yvonne was the sole narrator and the story was told in chronological order. I did think that this book was meticulously researched. The author did an excellent job in portraying the darkness and grittiness of WWII, and her writing was vivid and detailed. I recommend this novel for fans of Unsinkable, The Invisible Woman, and Code Name Helene!


Rating: 2 ½ out of 5 stars


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