A Novel of World War II
Mandy Robotham is a Globe and Mail, USA Today, and Canadian, US and Australian Kindle Top 100 bestseller. She has been an aspiring author from the age of nine, but was waylaid by journalism and later enticed by birth. She’s now a practicing midwife who writes about birth, death, love and everything else in between. She graduated with an MA in Creative Writing from Oxford Brookes University.
Praise for The Berlin Girl: ‘A gripping read, filled with tension
and suspense as war brews in 1930s Berlin.’ Fiona Valpy,
bestselling author of The Dressmaker’s Gift ‘The Berlin
Girl paints a vibrant picture of some of the chilling
harbingers of World War II. You'll gasp aloud and shed a few tears
on this insightful, bold, fast-paced ride through Berlin's last
moments of crumbling glory before the cloud of World War II
descends.’ Kristin Harmel, New York Times bestselling author
of The Book of Lost Names ‘I was gripped by Georgie’s mission to
alert the world to the horrors to come, as Hitler’s Germany
prepares to create a new Europe. Mandy Robotham’s description of
Berlin on the brink of war crackles with tension and shows us the
best and worst of humanity.’ Sarah Steele, author of The Missing
Pieces of Nancy Moon 'An absorbing read and a fascinating glimpse
into Berlin and Germany just before the outbreak of the Second
World War.'
Janet MacLeod Trotter, bestselling author of The Tea Planter’s
Daughter ‘A powerful and poignant look at how the world turned
upside down. Full of things I love in a novel from strong heroines
to forgotten history, this is Mandy’s best book yet.’ Lorna Cook,
#1 bestselling author of The Forgotten Village ‘Mandy captured a
chilling sense of tension and fear, knowing what was on the
horizon.’ Suzanne Goldring, author of My Name is Eva ‘Yet again,
Robotham shines a forensic light on another little-known story of
WW2… in the writer’s expert hands, this [novel] becomes agonisingly
tense as Georgie refuses to stand by as witness and becomes
embroiled in a terrifying game of cat and mouse.’ L P Fergusson,
author of The Summer Fields
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