From Publishers Weekly
Innumerable soldiers were stranded behind enemy lines in World War I some injured, some lost, some sole survivors of decimated regiments. Macintyre (The Napoleon of Crime) has uncovered the story of a small band of English soldiers who, in 1914, were found and sheltered by the peasants of Villeret, a small French village near the Somme River. When the German occupiers became more intrusive in local life, billeting their troops in private homes and confiscating supplies, the French took a more collective approach to hiding the Brits sharing their food and housing among a network of families. One soldier was hidden in an armoire, another dressed as a girl; somehow, most did their best and eventually passed themselves off as locals. Private Robert Digby, the hero of this tale, blended in so successfully "It's almost like he was running for mayor," said one villager that he fell in love with the local belle, Claire Dessenne. At first, hiding the British was a unifying act of resistance, but by 1916, after years of hunger and occupation, solidarity broke. The four remaining British soldiers including Digby, now the father of young Hlne Dessenne were rounded up and executed. Who turned them in? Claire's spurned rival? A spy turned informer? While Macintyre is satisfyingly thorough in his attempt to solve this long-buried mystery, he is even better at recreating the texture of day-to-day life in rural, occupied France. As readers grope with understanding our present war, they may find this more remote one oddly instructive. Weapons may change, but it's the people some treacherous, some brave, but most of them in between who count. B&w photos not seen by PW. Agent, Ed Victor. (Jan.)Forecast: This title has the potential to break out of the war genre; fans of Michael Ondaatje and Jayne Ann Phillips should enjoy this tale of love and its consequences.Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
"War forges a few heroes and villains, but often it thrusts ordinary, frail people into a moral no-man's-land, forcing upon them choices or compromises they could never have anticipated." So it was for the townspeople of Villeret, France, who chose to hide a group of British soldiers caught behind enemy lines during World War I. It's a magnificent story and a stirring reminder that in times of war, bravery and self-sacrifice are not limited to the battlefield. Macintyre (The Napoleon of Crime) focuses on a variety of gripping details: the occupying Germans' powerful fears of treachery, which led them to forbid all manner of activity, from hanging out laundry to barking dogs; the love affair between a young French girl and a British soldier; and, most of all, the courage and self-sacrifice of the townspeople, who risked their lives on a daily basis to hide these young soldiers. The book has some surprising twists that include such pure examples of love, betrayal, honor, and sacrifice that it is easy to forget that the story is absolutely true. Recommended for all libraries. Amy Strong, South Portland, ME Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
The Englishman's Daughter: A True Story of Love and Betrayal in World War One FROM THE PUBLISHER
In the first terrifying days of World War I, a handful of British soldiers found themselves trapped behind enemy lines on the Western Front. Unable to rejoin their units, which were retreating under the German onslaught, they were forced to hide in the French countryside. The Englishman's Daughter is the extraordinary true story of these men, their rescuers, and the bittersweet love affair that sprang up between an enchanting French villager and a fugitive English soldier. This romance flourished under the very eyes of German occupiers, resulted in the birth of a child, and eventually tore a community apart.
FROM THE CRITICS
Jonathan Yardley - Washington Post Book World
The story Ben Macintyre tells in the lovely, affecting The Englishman's Daughter is at once simple in the extreme yet complex and elusive.
Rosemary Herbert - Boston Herald
Reads like a novel while succeeding as a sterling piece of investigative journalism.
Thomas Mallon - The New York Times Book Review
[The] flickering survival of the not-too-distant past inside the present is often this fine writer's largest subject.
Jonathan Yardley - The Washington Post
[A] lovely, affecting book . . . Macintyre has pieced together a remarkably thorough account that has the ring of truth.
Lyn MacDonald - The Times [London]
A poignant love story set against the backdrop of war, tragedy, treachery . . . [that] turns into a page-turning mystery. Read all 13 "From The Critics" >