52 pages • 1 hour read
Kelly RimmerA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
The motif of history emphasizes the theme of Sacrifices Made by Wartime Operatives and The Secrets of War. As Noah struggles to understand his past and dig through considerable trauma, he must confront how the past has shaped the present. For Theo, history is tied to identity; he views history as inextricably tied to the present self. He would advocate for “nature” in a “nature vs. nurture” debate. As an adopted son, Theo is driven by the desire to understand his lost family history. As the war veterans consider their own histories, they admit that they are not proud of all their past actions, and this dynamic is explored on both an individual and an institutional level. In real life, the SOE received criticism for establishing precedents that were later used by terrorist organizations during wartime. While Noah and Remy are both afraid to confront the truths of their past, they accept that their versions of history are not the only ones that exist, and by hearing the accounts of other operatives and reconciling their notion of truth, they realize that there are multiple ways of processing and recording the same event.
The motif of names buttresses the themes of The Psychological Toll of Espionage and Sacrifices Made by Wartime Operatives. As the operatives are frequently assigned new code names, Rimmer deliberately causes confusion and muddles the identities of her characters to simulate the disorienting effect of taking on alternate identities and names during wartime. This narrative confusion is designed to emphasize the required concentration of agents for whom maintaining a covert identity is essential for survival. However, with this constant changing of names comes an inevitable erasure of authentic identity. While Noah only receives one code name during the novel, Josie and Eloise both receive several iterations of code names. With each name, they must remember the new name itself and also the backstory of the character they are playing. As they inhabit new identities to get past German guards and the ever-tighter nooses of surveillance, Josie and Eloise must suppress their own individuality to minimize the risk of exposure, for just as there is vulnerability in authenticity, there is freedom in pretending to be someone else.
The symbol of the rosary represents Eloise’s enduring faith in her cause. After Eloise’s husband Giles was shot down in North Africa, she received a package of his belongings. He wrote her a letter, and his commanding officer also included the St. Michael’s medal and the rosary that he was wearing. Eloise has avoided reading the letter because she knows it will be difficult; she only reads it when she is assembling the box of precious items to send to her son. The rosary also represents Sacrifices Made by Wartime Operatives. Part of what makes Eloise’s faith so important is its ability to provide comfort and sustain her during periods of uncertainty. For Eloise, Catholicism is a constant of both her English and French identities, for she holds fast to the idea that a higher power will continue to guide her family. Eloise deeply misses her son and hopes that he will understand the reasons for her sacrifice. She loses her husband and her mother to war, but throughout her many hardships, the rosary highlights her need to believe that her son will emerge as a survivor who can appreciate what she has done.
Daughters & Sons
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French Literature
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Marriage
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Memorial Day Reads
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Memory
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Military Reads
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Nation & Nationalism
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The Past
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Truth & Lies
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War
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World War II
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