Odette
By (Author) Jerrard Tickell
Headline Publishing Group
Headline Review
1st July 2008
29th May 2008
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
European history
Second World War
Modern warfare
940.548641092
Paperback
384
Width 130mm, Height 198mm, Spine 26mm
306g
'I am a very ordinary woman to whom a chance was given to see human beings at their best and at their worst... I completely believe in the potential nobility of the human spirit.'
During some of the darkest days of the Second World War, a young Frenchwoman living as a mother and housewife in England left her ordinary life to become a British agent, working covertly in France to aid the Resistance. Entering a murky and deadly world of espionage and double-dealing, she was betrayed to the Germans, only to endure torture by the Gestapo and the hell of the infamous concentration camp of Ravensbruck. Yet she retained a compassion, grace and spiritedness that mystified her captors; and, living to see the liberation of Europe, she kept, in the direst circumstances, her fundamental trust in goodness. ODETTE tells the moving and inspirational story of a woman, who, in her courage and her ability to hold on to hope, was far from ordinary.Jerrard Tickell (1905-1966) was born in Dublin and educated in Tipperary and London. His career as a writer began in 1936, with SEE HOW THEY RUN and continued with a series of bestselling novels and biographies, ODETTE (1949) being the best known. Tickell married and had three sons.