

NATIONAL BESTSELLER Featured in The New York Times , The Atlantic , Time , New York Newsday , and on Today ! โA nonfiction thriller.โโ The Wall Street Journal From New York Times and international bestselling author of the โgrippingโ (Michael Connelly, #1 New York Times bestselling author) Into the Lionโs Mouth comes the extraordinary true story of Odette Sansom, the British spy who operated in occupied France and fell in love with her commanding officer during World War IIโperfect for fans of Unbroken , The Nightingale , and Code Girls . The year is 1942, and World War II is in full swing. Odette Sansom decides to follow in her war hero fatherโs footsteps by becoming an SOE agent to aid Britain and her beloved homeland, France. Five failed attempts and one plane crash later, she finally lands in occupied France to begin her mission. It is here that she meets her commanding officer Captain Peter Churchill. As they successfully complete mission after mission, Peter and Odette fall in love. All the while, they are being hunted by the cunning German secret police sergeant, Hugo Bleicher, who finally succeeds in capturing them. They are sent to Parisโs Fresnes prison, and from there to concentration camps in Germany where they are starved, beaten, and tortured. But in the face of despair, they never give up hope, their love for each other, or the whereabouts of their colleagues. In Code Name: Lise , Larry Loftis paints a portrait of true courage, patriotism, and loveโof two incredibly heroic people who endured unimaginable horrors and degradations. He seamlessly weaves together the touching romance between Odette and Peter and the thrilling cat and mouse game between them and Sergeant Bleicher. With this amazing testament to the human spirit, Loftis proves once again that he is adept at writing โnonfiction that reads like a page-turning novelโ ( Parade ). Review: ~~Harrowing/Heart-Breaking/Horrific~~ - A captivating true story of a female spy in World War II. In all honesty, I had to read this in a 3 day time span. It was so harrowing, horrific and heart-breaking, I had to take many breaks while reading. 'Code Name: Lise' worked for the SPINDLE Circuit (Special Operations Executive) or SOE as it is referred to in this book. She was born in France but moved to England at an early age. Odette was her name at birth. The entire time I was reading this true story, my admiration for her grew. From her recruitment into SOE and the training, her determination to succeed illustrated her true spirit. And, of course, I kept wondering what created her motivation? Despite numerous serious health problems at an early age, she persevered. And, persevered with an open mind and spirit. The depth of the training was intense and was divided into 4 phases. And, it should be noted that 80% of the trainees were disqualified. Not one area was left out....physical, explosives, weapons, ciphers, killing and even included grenades and machine guns. These agents were trained to the maximum and trust me, without this intense training, some would have not survived. Finally in early 1943, she was on her way and SPINDLE was set. Her commanding officer was Peter Churchill and the mission was in Marseilles, France. The beginning of the spy portion in this book. For me, some items really stood out including the rationing of food during the war. Also, on a personal note my Dad was in WW II aboard an aircraft carrier and he had told me years ago that the radio equipment was so heavy. In this book, the radio operator was tasked with carrying the equipment to different locations to avoid detection. As one may surmise, these operators were truly sought after as they had knowledge of many items the other side was extremely interested in. The treatment of the prisoners in the prisons and in the Concentration Camps was just plain horrific. The Gestapo had interrogation fine-tuned to extract the most information. I have never read more details about the interrogation techniques than in this book. And, this is when I had to take frequent breaks...excruciating is the word that comes to mind but really torture at its finest...ouch... Some better moments occurred, however, with the selfless priest, Father Steinert. Thank God, for people of his caliber... Truly a saint put into the cloak of a priest at the right time for the prisoners. And, I also kept wondering where in the world did Odette get her intestinal fortitude to carry on? Where does courage come from? And, why did she join in the SOE in the first place? The author has a most interesting Appendix that explains the awards (including the George Cross) given to Odette and Peter were not without a lot of controversy. And, controversy that continued for many years. Truly an educational read for me...especially the portions on the training aspect for SOE, the treatment of the prisoners by the Gestapo, and the manner in which the missions were carried out. Most highly recommended... Review: Code Name: Lise, World War II's most highly decorated spy - Final Book Review My final book review is on the book โCode Name: Liseโ. It was written by American author, attorney, and adjunct professor of law at the University of Florida Larry Loftis. Known for his international best seller โInto the Lionโs Mouthโ which is the true story of Dusko Popov a WWII spy and the real-life inspiration for the international nonfiction spy thriller โJames Bondโ. Among the more known characters of World War II, such as Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin, or Eisenhower, there are lesser-known heroes and heroines. Loftis, intrigued by the history of World War II, wants to bring the unsung heroes the honor they deserve for their service, one of these heroines is Odette Samson. Published on January 15, 2019 โCode Name: Liseโ captors the life of an ordinary mother who finds that it is her duty to fight against the Germans in the heart of occupied France. This twisted nonfiction thriller shows the courage, love, and determination that any spy during World WarII aspired to have. โCode Name: Liseโ captors the reader and makes them feel apart of Odette Samsonโs journey. After Loftis wrote the book โInto the Lionโs Mouthโ he went to work researching a new hero to write about. He searched for many historical records but came up blank. In one document he read about a woman named โLiseโ. He began to search for more information about her. Loftis discovered that she was a french woman and her real name was Odette Samson. But the most interesting fact he came to uncover was that she was World War IIโs most highly decorated spy. He collected information from her detailed Special Operations Executive files also known as SOE files, hear she documented her experiences. Other resources were her interview in the Imperial War Museum, the UK National Archives, and from other books written about her like the book โOdette: World War IIโs Darling Spyโ written by Penny Starns and โOdetteโ written by Jerrard Tickell. He was amazed that people did not know about her and decided that the world must hear her story. โCode Name: Liseโ takes place in the year 1942. World War II is underway and Britain requires new SOE agents to go into occupied France. Samson was born in France, but at the time of World War II she lived in Britain with her three daughters. As a young girl, she learned the importance of joining the fight from her grandfather. Britain was in desperate need of fluent French speakers and French natives. Samson with her knowledge of France was their number one choice. She agreed said goodbye to her daughters and joined the fight on the front lines. The book โCode Name: Liseโ creates a story from Samsonโs first person view. The book begins with an explanation of why the author chose to write the book and his process in finding the information. Loftis then goes into the prolog where we see a future view of Samsonโs life. The chapters in the book follows the process of Samson's life. Join her struggle in making life changing decisions. Her story ends with an epilog of her receiving her medals and her return to Britain. Larry Loftis than proceeds to question some of Samsonโs choices in the author's notes. His main question is โHow could she leave her children to go fight in a war?โ Loftis also includes a section of the book titled โAfter Wordsโ were we see a glimpse of Samsonโs family. This book has many strengths and very few weaknesses. The strengths of this book are that it gives you the ability to feel the emotions of the characters. It also gives you the perspective that you are right beside the character and experiencing their reality. A weakness in this book is that it does not answer some common questions like, โWhat happened to Samsonโs first husband Geoffrey Hallowes?โ, โWhy did she leave her children to go fight?โ, and โWhat gave her the courage to accomplish what she didโ. In conclusion this book expresses the courage, resilience, and patriotism that any World War II spy had but it underlines the fearlessness of Odette Sansom and her coworker Peter Churchill. Odette Samson became the most highly decorated spy in World War II for sacrificing her life in place of her fellow operatives. I would recommend this book to people who enjoy reading about World War II and what spies had to overcome to accomplish their goals to fight back against Germany.
| Best Sellers Rank | #107,187 in Kindle Store ( See Top 100 in Kindle Store ) #11 in Biographies of Espionage #161 in History eBooks of Women #224 in World War II History (Books) |
S**.
~~Harrowing/Heart-Breaking/Horrific~~
A captivating true story of a female spy in World War II. In all honesty, I had to read this in a 3 day time span. It was so harrowing, horrific and heart-breaking, I had to take many breaks while reading. 'Code Name: Lise' worked for the SPINDLE Circuit (Special Operations Executive) or SOE as it is referred to in this book. She was born in France but moved to England at an early age. Odette was her name at birth. The entire time I was reading this true story, my admiration for her grew. From her recruitment into SOE and the training, her determination to succeed illustrated her true spirit. And, of course, I kept wondering what created her motivation? Despite numerous serious health problems at an early age, she persevered. And, persevered with an open mind and spirit. The depth of the training was intense and was divided into 4 phases. And, it should be noted that 80% of the trainees were disqualified. Not one area was left out....physical, explosives, weapons, ciphers, killing and even included grenades and machine guns. These agents were trained to the maximum and trust me, without this intense training, some would have not survived. Finally in early 1943, she was on her way and SPINDLE was set. Her commanding officer was Peter Churchill and the mission was in Marseilles, France. The beginning of the spy portion in this book. For me, some items really stood out including the rationing of food during the war. Also, on a personal note my Dad was in WW II aboard an aircraft carrier and he had told me years ago that the radio equipment was so heavy. In this book, the radio operator was tasked with carrying the equipment to different locations to avoid detection. As one may surmise, these operators were truly sought after as they had knowledge of many items the other side was extremely interested in. The treatment of the prisoners in the prisons and in the Concentration Camps was just plain horrific. The Gestapo had interrogation fine-tuned to extract the most information. I have never read more details about the interrogation techniques than in this book. And, this is when I had to take frequent breaks...excruciating is the word that comes to mind but really torture at its finest...ouch... Some better moments occurred, however, with the selfless priest, Father Steinert. Thank God, for people of his caliber... Truly a saint put into the cloak of a priest at the right time for the prisoners. And, I also kept wondering where in the world did Odette get her intestinal fortitude to carry on? Where does courage come from? And, why did she join in the SOE in the first place? The author has a most interesting Appendix that explains the awards (including the George Cross) given to Odette and Peter were not without a lot of controversy. And, controversy that continued for many years. Truly an educational read for me...especially the portions on the training aspect for SOE, the treatment of the prisoners by the Gestapo, and the manner in which the missions were carried out. Most highly recommended...
G**T
Code Name: Lise, World War II's most highly decorated spy
Final Book Review My final book review is on the book โCode Name: Liseโ. It was written by American author, attorney, and adjunct professor of law at the University of Florida Larry Loftis. Known for his international best seller โInto the Lionโs Mouthโ which is the true story of Dusko Popov a WWII spy and the real-life inspiration for the international nonfiction spy thriller โJames Bondโ. Among the more known characters of World War II, such as Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin, or Eisenhower, there are lesser-known heroes and heroines. Loftis, intrigued by the history of World War II, wants to bring the unsung heroes the honor they deserve for their service, one of these heroines is Odette Samson. Published on January 15, 2019 โCode Name: Liseโ captors the life of an ordinary mother who finds that it is her duty to fight against the Germans in the heart of occupied France. This twisted nonfiction thriller shows the courage, love, and determination that any spy during World WarII aspired to have. โCode Name: Liseโ captors the reader and makes them feel apart of Odette Samsonโs journey. After Loftis wrote the book โInto the Lionโs Mouthโ he went to work researching a new hero to write about. He searched for many historical records but came up blank. In one document he read about a woman named โLiseโ. He began to search for more information about her. Loftis discovered that she was a french woman and her real name was Odette Samson. But the most interesting fact he came to uncover was that she was World War IIโs most highly decorated spy. He collected information from her detailed Special Operations Executive files also known as SOE files, hear she documented her experiences. Other resources were her interview in the Imperial War Museum, the UK National Archives, and from other books written about her like the book โOdette: World War IIโs Darling Spyโ written by Penny Starns and โOdetteโ written by Jerrard Tickell. He was amazed that people did not know about her and decided that the world must hear her story. โCode Name: Liseโ takes place in the year 1942. World War II is underway and Britain requires new SOE agents to go into occupied France. Samson was born in France, but at the time of World War II she lived in Britain with her three daughters. As a young girl, she learned the importance of joining the fight from her grandfather. Britain was in desperate need of fluent French speakers and French natives. Samson with her knowledge of France was their number one choice. She agreed said goodbye to her daughters and joined the fight on the front lines. The book โCode Name: Liseโ creates a story from Samsonโs first person view. The book begins with an explanation of why the author chose to write the book and his process in finding the information. Loftis then goes into the prolog where we see a future view of Samsonโs life. The chapters in the book follows the process of Samson's life. Join her struggle in making life changing decisions. Her story ends with an epilog of her receiving her medals and her return to Britain. Larry Loftis than proceeds to question some of Samsonโs choices in the author's notes. His main question is โHow could she leave her children to go fight in a war?โ Loftis also includes a section of the book titled โAfter Wordsโ were we see a glimpse of Samsonโs family. This book has many strengths and very few weaknesses. The strengths of this book are that it gives you the ability to feel the emotions of the characters. It also gives you the perspective that you are right beside the character and experiencing their reality. A weakness in this book is that it does not answer some common questions like, โWhat happened to Samsonโs first husband Geoffrey Hallowes?โ, โWhy did she leave her children to go fight?โ, and โWhat gave her the courage to accomplish what she didโ. In conclusion this book expresses the courage, resilience, and patriotism that any World War II spy had but it underlines the fearlessness of Odette Sansom and her coworker Peter Churchill. Odette Samson became the most highly decorated spy in World War II for sacrificing her life in place of her fellow operatives. I would recommend this book to people who enjoy reading about World War II and what spies had to overcome to accomplish their goals to fight back against Germany.
C**A
Very eye opening
This book was absolutely not my preferred genre. However, the author is clearly a very talented writer with a heart for research and telling the entire story. The book was slightly confusing in that everyone seemed to have multiple names, I was so thankful they had listed everyone at the beginning so I could look back and keep things straight. This book was very eye opening in regards to non-Jewish people also being imprisoned. This book definitely educated me on an aspect of World War II that I was not familiar with. I loved the included photos. It was nice to see women heroes. I wish more of them could have survived. Overall well written and worth reading, especially if this is the genre you enjoy.
B**E
Romance novel based on the life of Lise (Odette)
Odette Sansom was one of the most highly decorated spies in English history; male of female. You will not find what she did to deserve her awards in this book. Odette was an agent of the โFโ (French) section of the SOE. The. โFโ section has been mistreated by history, mostly because the section spent most of WWII having to fend off attacks by De Gaulle that were nearly as ferocious as those of the nazies. SOE had to organize a separate section (Free French) to support De Gaulleโs organization. The latter was despised by Roosevelt and barely tolerated by Churchill (e.g., De Gaulle was excluded from the D-Day planning, he was not told the date of the D-day until the 4th of June; the Free French division that was a part of the D-day got its orders before De Gaulle learned of the day of the invasion) Since the history is written by the winners, the stories of section โFโ operatives that were separate from the triumphs of the Free French have been infrequent until recently. This book is one of those stories that are irresistible to a WWII buff. The book is chronological. The first half describes the life of Odette Sansom before the war, her decision to join SOE, her training, her deployment and work in France. The second part of the book is her falling in love with Peter Churchill, her arrest, her single-minded dedication to Peter, her mistreatment by the Germans, her liberation, her short marriage to Peter, and her fight to clear her name from a smear campaign after the war. These two parts have very little in common other than the names of the persons involved. The first part of the book contains very little original material. Most factual details about SOE are clipped from three books that I highly recommend: โMadame Fourcade's Secret Warโ (Madame Fourcad was the leader of the French Resistance network "Alliance"), โSpymistress: The True Story of the Greatest Female Secret Agent of World War IIโ (the story of Vera Atkins), and โBetween Silk and Cyanideโ (Leo Marks description of the Code war). The fillers in between those are the setup of a classic Romance Novel: a sensitive woman struggling against suffocating marriage, uncaring husband, and the society that does not understand her. The description of what Lise (Odetteโs code name) was doing in France is both very factual and very disappointing. Many reviewers came up with a statement, โI understand that she was a courier. But what does a courier do?โ What tripped them is that a courier is one of the most dangerous jobs, one of the most vital, and, at the same time, one of the most boring. All three aspects were presented in the book very honestly and without trying to make Lise a James Bond. Unfortunately, this is the point where the Great Romance starts and overshadows everything else. For those who do not know the function of the courier: spy and even saboteur organizations live and die by their ability to communicate. Information collected by a spy is useless unless it is conveyed to a group organizer, analyzed by him/her, collated, sent to a wireless operator, and transmitted to the SOE. The questionnaires from SOE travel in the opposite direction. The courier facilitates these transactions since none of the players could be permitted to know each other. Otherwise, an arrest of one person would lead to a complete collapse of the whole organization. Couriers and the organizer are the only people who know nearly everybody and have to keep it secret. The boring part of the courier work is that she just goes from one place to another. The horrifying part is that she is nearly always carrying incriminating evidence on herself, she is one of the most prized targets, and knows it. She (the book explains why it typically was โsheโ) lives by her wits and, being a source of the most valuable information, would have to withstand horrific abuse to extract this information when captured. The author described all three parts faithfully. Lise (Odette) was captured, horribly abused and did not reveal anything. Peter Churchillโs organization was very successful. Lise contributed greatly to its success. The reader will not find a single bit of information related to the importance of SPINDLE circuit that they ran. Instead, the book turns into the Great Romance Novel. The author obviously interviewed many people but the artistic license that he took, the complete substitution of his thoughts for those of Peter and Odette, the great dialogues that he uses to describe his heroes are horribly distracting. I would not spoil the readers a chance to enjoy every excruciating detail of Odetteโs feelings for Peter, and Peterโs feelings for Odette as imagined by the author. The last part of the book is dedicated to Peter and Odette trying to defend their names against a smear campaign that was to hound their lives in the fifties and sixties. I think the author did them a disservice in describing it in great details. The saying โDo not wrestle with pigs in mud; you will not come out clean and the pigs may enjoy itโ comes to mind. You either totally destroy the pigs or stop at calling them pigs. The author spends way more time on that subject than on what Peter did in France or in England during the war. I presume the book has its target audience; it is definitely not an audience of people who want to learn what Odette did and why she deserved her awards.
G**T
Great read.
Great book!
F**Y
Fascinating Read
Fascinating book. 4.5 stars. Very glad I read it. Have read many WWII books. I enjoy reading about women that were a part of winning the war. This woman was truly amazing. I had heard her name mentioned before,but really did not know much about her. As I read, I had to remind myself that this is a true story. Some of it was unimaginable. At times I had to set the book down and take a breath. After page 100, I had a hard time putting the book down.....I had to keep reading the next chapter. It really kept me up late because I just had to know what happened next. Suspenseful, thriller, espionage, love story, just a bit of everything! Highly recommend it.
G**X
WOW!
I donโt know about most people but I have always wondered how I would have responded to the events of World War II. I have made it my intent to watch as many documentaries and read selective books about the War and I am in awe regarding the courageous men and women who faced horrors the likes of which very few of todayโs youth will ever experience; I hope. It does raise an interesting question and that is would todayโs youth respond as the youth of the 30โs and 40โs did? This book was definitely a page turner for me. Itโs about a French woman who married and moved to England prior to the commencement of WWII. Because she was fluent in the French language and knew her way around France, she was asked to consider joining the British forces as a spy working for the allies. She was the mother of 3 girls and you would have thought that becoming a spy would not be something she would consider, yet it was because of her three daughters she felt the need to do something to help the war effort. Her story was riveting and I could not put the book down. The description of what happened during her time being a captive of the Germans with a death sentence already determined was not something you see in the documentaries of WWII. The book is about her ordeals, her life, her love of another spy within her circle, her determination, and her desire to make a difference and of course how it all turned out. To say any more would do the book an injustice and may discourage readers of this review from reading the book. Who should read this book? Thatโs a great question. Given the subject matter, WWII, most people wonโt take the time to read it. I can assure you that in this case the truth of what happened is much better than any book of fiction you could ever read. Everyone would benefit from the book but I think young women would benefit the most. Would I read it again? There would be no need to read it again. Her story is her story and it wonโt change nor would I gain any further insight into what transpired. Would I give it as a gift? ABSOLUTELY!
K**R
A very Good Accounting some very brave people who happened to be spys
This was a very informative book. The story lays out what happened to many people who had spied for England during WWII. I have read many books on WWII; but none that addressed British spies. Their trials and tribulations were very moving. It was a very good read.
D**X
Hard to put down.
Still reading this book. Once started hard to put down.
S**R
A Remarkable Account Of A Remarkable Heroine
As someone who knows Odette's story well, I was delighted to read this book from Larry Loftis. He writes a faithful account of Odette's recruitment into SOE; her work as part of the Spindle network; and most importantly, her incredible courage, dignity and fortitude. Her story comes alive as the pages turn. 'Code Name: Lise' will take Odette's legacy to a much larger audience, and for this we can only be grateful to Mr Loftis. It will also undoubtedly give younger generations a deep insight into what it is that makes a real heroine.
M**H
Great read!
Larry Loftis is my new favourite author. Never knew a book with so much factual detail could be such a good read! He filled in some gaps in my sketchy knowledge of WW2 and he is a consummate story teller.
S**S
Great book
Love the book. Will read it again.
R**E
Code Name: Lise: The True Story of the Woman Who Became WWII's Most Highly Decorated Spy
A thoroughly good read.
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