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The Art Spy

The Extraordinary Untold Tale of WWII Resistance Hero Rose Valland

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The Art Spy

Auteur(s): Michelle Young
Narrateur(s): Erin Bennett
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A riveting and stylish saga set in Paris during World War II, The Art Spy uncovers how an unlikely heroine infiltrated the Nazi leadership to save the world's most treasured masterpieces.

On August 25, 1944, Rose Valland, a woman of quiet daring, found herself in a desperate position. From the windows of her beloved Jeu de Paume museum, where she had worked and ultimately spied, she could see the battle to liberate Paris thundering around her. The Jeu de Paume, co-opted by Nazi leadership, was now the Germans’ final line of defense. Would the museum curator be killed before she could tell the truth—a story that would mean nothing less than saving humanity’s cultural inheritance?

Based on troves of previously undiscovered documents, The Art Spy chronicles the brave actions of the key Resistance spy in the heart of the Nazi’s art looting headquarters in the French capital. A veritable female Monuments Man, Valland has, until now, been written out of the annals, despite bearing witness to history’s largest art theft. While Hitler was amassing stolen art for his future Führermuseum, Valland, his undercover adversary, secretly worked to stop him.

At every stage of World War II, Valland was front and center. She came face to face with Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring, passed crucial information to the Resistance network, put herself deliberately in harm’s way to protect the museum and her staff, and faced death during the last hours of Liberation Day.

At the same time, a young Free French soldier, Alexandre Rosenberg, was fighting his way to Paris with the Allied forces battling to liberate France. Alexandre's father was the exclusive art dealer for Picasso, Matisse, George Braque, and Fernand Léger. The Nazis had taken everything from their family—their art collection, their nationality, their gallery, and their home in Paris.

Vivid and atmospheric, The Art Spy moves from the glittering days of pre-War Paris, home to geniuses of modern culture, including Picasso, Josephine Baker, Coco Chanel, Le Corbusier, and Frida Kahlo, through the tension-riddled cities and resorts of Europe on the eve of war, to the harrowing years of the Nazi occupation of France when brave people such as Valland and Rosenberg risked everything to fight monstrous evil.

In the spirit of Hidden Figures, with the sweeping narrative of The Rape of Europa and the depth of The Resistance Quartet, The Art Spy is an extraordinary tale of a female hero whose courage and tenacity in a time of violence and terror is an inspiration for us all.

©2025 Michelle Young (P)2025 HarperCollins Publishers
Europe Femmes France Guerres et conflits Histoire Militaire Espionnage

Ce que les critiques en disent

* Publishers Weekly Best Books of Summer 2025 * Bookbub Best Non-Fiction Release of the Season * MSNBC/Afar Magazine 10 Best Books for the Summer Traveler * Newsday’s Top Must-Read Book for Summer * Christian Science Monitor Best Book of May 2025 * Longlisted for the 2025 American Library in Paris Book Award

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Wow, such an incredible book. Rose Volland is one of my heroines, so I was very excited to see this when it first became available for pre-order on Audible. It was with relief that I started listening: this was going to be a full biography, at last! Everything else I have found on Rose repeats the same well known details. The author has done a fabulous job of researching Rose’s life, and gained access to personal papers. We learn about her young life, her struggle to obtain a job commiserate with her knowledge (her work during WWII was unpaid), her long-term relationship (which had to be clandestine due to when/where she lived), her work with the Monuments Men in art repatriation in post war Germany, again her struggle to get a high calibre job back in Paris, and her later years.

My only criticism of this book, perhaps, is the title, as it is not immediately obvious who the book is about. Plus Rose was so much more than an art spy. With so many other books on art fraud, it would be easy for even her fans to miss it. Something like, “Rose Volland: The spy who singlehandedly saved thousands of artworks in WWII” would have been better.

Rose Volland’s story, at last!

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