Member Reviews

Thanks to Netgalley for a copy of this book for an honest review.

I must admit, I'm a sucker for WW2 books, particularly books about women and the resistance. However, this book missed the mark. Just seemed repetitive and stilted.

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Monique is 17 when her family is forcibly taken from their apartment leaving her hiding in a cabinet in the kitchen. Somehow she is not found and manages to stay in place until she is forced to come out to look for food. She is seen stealing food and while running from the police ends up being rescued by a large man who hides her in his truck.

He sneaks her out of his apartment one day, tells her to wear a blindfold, and introduces her to the Resistance, who at first say they cannot help her. The leader, Philip decides she may be useful when he discovers she is fluent in German and French. Given a new identity, she is soon caught between the German soldiers, the resistance, and trying to remember her real identity.

I was given the opportunity to read this book by NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

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Rounded up from 2.5 to 3 stars because the book tells an interesting story and is fairly clean.
Running for her life from the Nazis, Monique, a seventeen-year-old Jewish girl, escapes through the streets of Paris. A man from the French Resistance finds and saves her, then introduces her to Philip. As part of the resistance, Philip asks Monique to discover Nazi secrets as she works in a local bakery and listens to the German soldiers talk.
But Monique also begins an affair with an officer, and this relationship could end her life. Monique is never sure if her boyfriend knows her secret identity and fears that he will kill her at any time.
And everyone around her begins to die. Monique wonders if she's the one responsible for the death of her friends?
This book tells the story of life in Paris under Nazi occupation. I did like the interesting perspective. Also, Monique's inner dialogue reveals the horrors of occupation and the challenges people face as they survive. I didn't like the choppy writing style that didn't flow and kept me on edge.

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This story is simply amazing it starts with Monique and her family experiencing a raid on them because they are Jewish and her hiding and then goes onto all her wartime experiences in a terrifying Paris this is one which if you love historical fiction you can’t put down - I simply loved it and read it in 3 sittings ! A must read

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The Girl Under the Flag is Set in Paris during WW2. The main character is a young Jewish woman that escaped being taken by the Germans by hiding in a cabinet when her parents and brother were taken. After running and hiding, she meets with a man that connects with the resistance movement. She works at a bakery that is frequented by the German soldiers. She is fluent in German and uses this to listen to the soldiers conversations. She reports information that she heard to the resistance. She has a relationship with a high ranking German officer to obtain information. She takes many risks to obtain valuable information. This awesome book is a compelling read. It was hard to put the book down once I started reading it.

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I love how The Girl Under the Flag takes us into the mind of a young girl during the Nazi occupation of Paris, and how she must do all she can to survive. After losing her family, Monique becomes a heroine and a member of the Nazi resistance. What I found beautiful about this book was the way the author handled her thoughts. She moves forward with her mission in mind, losing her innocence and showing extreme bravery. It was a wonderful read and one more literary baby step toward relinquishing anti-semitism in our world. Thank you Net Galley, and thank you to the author Alex Amit, for a believable and moving historical novel.

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Thank you to Netgalley and BooksGoSocial for the arc of The Girl Under the Flag by Alex Amit.

4 star read- this follows a girl named Monique whom is 17 and Jewish. She hates herself for her religion so she ends up fighting with her family over this until being alone in the world when they get sent to Auschwitz.. But she very narrowly avoids capture due to her mums thinking at that time, so she is then forced to be homeless on the street for a while until she ends up running into the law, ends her up in the arms of someone called Philip and the resistance by extension... with having no other option she joins up and she ends up having a new identity and she then ends up befriending a German soldier.. who is the person for the main sources of information...

This was a great 4 star read, well written and I love the character of Monique! well portrayed and presented.

4 stars- ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Highly Recommend.

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I was able to read this novel before it was published. WWII historical novels are my favorite fun genre. The French Resistance was the subject of my Master's Thesis and much of my doctoral research. So I am always on the look out for a new book in the French Resistance genre. I thought the story of a Jewish girl on the run provides an interesting twist to the Resistance female genre so popular now. I think this book could also be marketed to high school girls as a great title under the YA genre. Also life under the German Occupation provides a rich resource to mine for great heroic stories especially about women. They were key especially in France where so many of the men were gone. This story revolves around the character of Monique, teen on her own and on the run from the SS sweep of Jews in Paris. Cut loose from the safety of her family and friends, she quickly learns the desperation of life on the run and no one to trust. Quickly, Monique comes under the protection of a resistance member and keeps her safe. He hides her and provides a new identity. And now, with her work in the bakery cafe, she becomes a spy.

Alex Amit knows the nuances of the Occupation well. He accurately portrays the interaction between the differing levels of the resistance and the role of the Communists in the resistance. Amit paid attention to detail regarding how secretly the resistance had to operate. The author included some very good plot points that you don't often see-- the Allied bombing of France, that not all Germans were evil incarnate, and that women did what it took to survive. As for female collaborators, Amit did not vilify the women who sought solace in German arms to survive. The reality of trying to survive at all costs forced women to do things they regretted.

In spite of all the attention to detail about the resistance, Amit's attention to detail slips in certain places. I found it a little hard to believe that the women collaborators never bothered to learned the soldiers last names even after two years. This seems a little weird because German soldiers were regularly addressed by their rank and full name in public. So for Monique to never learn Ernst's last name just didn't ring true especially since she's reading documents in his brief case in her work as a spy.
I know I sound like I am nitpicking but I did catch some other things that just did not ring true. It has to do with language not plot points. Monique refers to her father as dad-- a very American term. A French girl, especially a Jewish girl , would have used the term Papa or Papan, not dad. It was a few little things like that which bothered me such as the term tank top. Other than that, Girl under the Flag is a good quick read. I finished it in two hours. Amit does a good job of creating life under the occupation and the difficult choices people, especially young women, had to make and the prices they paid for those choices.

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I can't stay away from books about this period of history and The Girl Under The Flag did not disappoint. I fell into the story within the first few pages and I was hooked on following Monique's journey. Quite a heavy ready, although. that is to be expected from this genre and it only serves to deepen the impression left by the story. I am definitely interested in reading more from Alex Amit now

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I love historical fiction! WWII is an especially intense time. This story opens up in Paris right when the first deportation of Jews occurs. The story then follows Monique as she tries to survive as a girl in that time. The plot and history are wonderful. I learned a !ot about France and the German occupation. I felt the story had a few too many undeveloped\forgotten characters. It also feels in the end the entire debate is whether she is truly French or German and the entire idea that she is Jewish has vanished! I think there were many good ideas that needed to be fleshed out more and others downplayed (why the obsession with smoking or the odors of men?) I also was a bit confused by the ending -it felt jarring and put of character. Why did she love Phillip? I feel like that entire romance was empty.
Overall, an interesting story and view of Paris during WWII. If you stick through the slow parts its a good 'pass the time' read!

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Monique is a 17 year old Jewish girl in Paris who hides when the Germans come to deport her parents and young brother. She escapes and goes for help to her aunt who rejects her. She is taken in and helped by a man and becomes part of the underground resistance. The fear that she faces during this time is well written about. The lengths she has to go to to fight for her life. A well written debut novel
Received this book from Netgalley and publishers in exchange for an honest review

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This was a DNF for me simply because the writing was so poor in my opinion. It was choppy and disjointed, leaving me trying to figure out what just happened from one sentence to the next and rereading sections because it would just change course or skip major scene details. The flow was really difficult to wade thru, and the majority of the characters’ conversations didn’t include who was speaking which made it very confusing. The grammar and structure was also off, as if it was translated from another language.

I tried to get thru it simply because the story line was interesting and I love WW2 fiction but it was just so difficult to read and felt so forced, I lost interest.

Thank you to NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for my review.

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I love WWII stories and this one is no exception! Paris when the Nazi's are all over the city are ordered in 1942 to round up all Jews and have them transferred to camps. Everyone who didn't get out in time,are trying to hid,where to hid and is it safe and then for now long? Monique's parents and brother are gone,she's hiding while she listens to the soldiers take them all away! They will be back for her they told the soldiers she was at the store. Monique takes off trying to find somewhere safe to hid and finds a man with the resistance but for her to stay safe she has to spy on the German and get information. Follow this crazy and dangerous plan,where she's just a German French girl not a Jew to be able to stay out of the camps but at what cost of they find out she's spying on them? Wonderful adventures and scary and dangerous follow Monique's life as it unfolds and the question is,will I ever see my brother and parents again? Alex Amit did a outstanding job in bringing this story alive!

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The Girl Under The Flying Flag follows Monique, a Jewish girl living in German-occupied France during WWII who finds herself all alone after her parents and little brother are taken and her aunt and uncle refuse to help her. Monique starts to help the Resistance out in the open which is a very dangerous thing to do.

This was an enjoyable read and I will definitely be buying this book formy library.

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The premise of the book is good. Monique, a Jewish girl living in Paris during WWII managed to hide when the French police come to take her family won the deportation trains. In order to survive she hides in the streets before being taken in by the resistance.

I wanted to like this book so much. I just could not get into it and gave up about 1/3 into the book. The timeline was confusing and choppy at times and the writing felt rote without much emotion, except for the first scene where she is hiding. That was good!

Thank you to Net Galley and the author, Alex Amit, for allowing me to read this book in exchange for my honest opinion.

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This was a very enjoyable book that was about a young woman who survived World War II by working for the Underground in plain sight of the high ranking Germans.

Monica would have done anything to protect her family,but lost both her parents and little brother who had autism to a death camp.
At wars end,she married the man who had been her main contact,when she acted as a spy.

This was a very good book and I appreciate "Net Galley" for the opportunity to read and review,and a special thanks to the author,Alex Amit.

This book has been reviewed for both Goodreads and Amazon.

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I received an ARC from NetGalley. I greatly enjoyed the book and the subject matter. I love reading historical fiction. I felt very much for Monique as she tried to hide and then fight against the resistance. It’s also a fast paced book, so reading it never becomes a chore. I would highly recommend it.

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A riveting story of a young girl forced to watch her parents and brother hauled off by soldiers part of Hitlers Regime because they were Jewish. Monique is a classic example of Jewish children made homeless and barely surviving if they aren’t brought into homes of sympathizers. Moniques journey is a rocky path because she becomes part of the French Resistance, but she is used as a lure to German officials because of her looks and her ability to speak German.

The author is able to showcase the different aspects of the characters involved in the Resistance and the roles they are reduced to playing because of circumstances. The subterfuge they endure and whether or not what they are perpetuating is right or wrong is cleverly done. I felt there were a few aspects in the book that were slow , but it would pick back up.

I would recommend this book because it is truly a good read.

I received a free advanced copy from NetGalley and these are my willingly given thoughts and opinions.

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This atmospheric story opens with Monique, a Parisian, Jewish, teenager finding her family being taken away in a German roundup to ( she eventually finds out )Auschwitz, and she has to find her own way with few friends and family in Paris.

Luckily she is quite resourceful and is able to make a deal with a local Resistance group and a man called Philip as her contact. She has to change her identity, and she begins working at a bakery that German soldiers frequent.

Monique then begins a relationship with a high ranking Nazi officer, sharing information with the Resistance, and the book is excellent at this aspect of her life. Slowly, the allies invade France and we are treated to the slow but exciting way the Germans (and her lover) handle the crisis.

An atmospheric tale, well told with that wonderful expression that I have never heard of: - 'horizontal collaborator'. Parisians are celebrating at the end of the German occupation and Monique has this unfortunate label!

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Monique is a seventeen year old Jewish girl who goes from hating herself for her religion and arguing over it with her family, to being all alone in the world when they get taken and sent to Auschwitz.

She herself narrowly avoided capture due to her mother's quick thinking, and she's forced to live on the street for a while until a run in with the law sends her into the arms of Philip, and the resistance by extension.

With no other choice, Monique joins up, gets a new identity and befriends a German officer who becomes her main source of information. Monique continues risking her life day after day, dreaming of a better future which doesn't seem to be on the horizon.

I really liked this book. I could've devoured it in one go, but I didn't want it to end.

The story is worth five stars, but I gave it four mainly because of the writing style, that's the one true flaw.

As a non-native English speaker, I'm sure I word my sentences a bit weirdly from time to time, and Monique does the same thing. Except she did it throughout the whole book. I did get used to it, eventually...

Some of the dialogue was choppy. One character would say one thing and the other would parrot it back as if the first never even said it.

There's a general repetitiveness. I can imagine her talking like that, yeah. But if I hear "body odor" one more time in the near future I'll probably start laughing like an idiot. There's just too many mentions of those two words together.

Monique's point of view was interesting to follow. The way she looks at the world is sad for the most part (and how couldn't it be?). She grows as a character, but some wounds never heal.

Philip was a mystery. Both in relation to us learning barely a few things about him and to Monique falling in love with him. I don't see how it happened. I feel like most of their love happened "off-page" because one moment she's relaying info and the next there's hugging (or desires to hug).

Ernest sounds pretty accurate. I don't have much to say about him other than that he's a good character.

I feel bad for Monique's friends, they all seem to have gotten the short end of the stick.

Historical accuracy is always appreciated. The author definitely did research on this and I love the note at the end.

*Thank you to the publishers and NetGalley for providing me with an e-ARC in exchange for an honest review*

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