Hearts of Resistance, by Soraya M. Lane, follows three women
through the devastation of WWII as they fight against the Nazi’s across Europe.
The first third of the book is one long extended recruiting montage (in a good
way, as we get to know the characters and their motivations). Sophia is in love
with a Jewish man, Alex, but that won’t go over well with her Nazi father. When
Alex’s family is taken away, Sophia hides him in her Berlin apartment and helps
ferry other Jews out of the city for months until she’s almost found out. She
and Alex have to flee, and she vows to continue fighting the evil regime in any
way she can. Rose lost her husband Peter to the war in France, and heads out to
their house in Brest to find some comfort, but instead finds wounded Allied
soldiers and the Resistance. Hazel is feeling confined by the expectations for
women in Britain, and the desire to do more than just sit at a desk translating
French documents. She signs up for a covert mission, and soon finds herself
fighting alongside Rose and Sophia in France in the lead up to D-Day.
I thoroughly enjoyed this tale. The pacing was fast and
exciting, and it was interesting to experience the war from a woman’s point of
view. So many of the books and movies about WWII involve the men fighting
(naturally), or the women pining back home and dealing with loss. It was
refreshing to read about some ladies who were out there trying to make a
difference, and interesting to learn that there really were woman doing all
this, and more probably, in that time.