'Three Ordinary Girls' is written by author Tim Brady and consists of 352 pages.
Three Ordinary Girls: Dutch Spies & Nazi Assassins - Book Review
Tim Brady
has written a true unforgettable story about three brave female Dutch teenagers
turned spy who were on clandestine mission to defeat Nazi during the warfare of
WWII.
If you like
to read true but fascinating stories that don't let your eyes off from any
single moment, then I recommend reading this about three ordinary girls. It was
time when Dutch surrendered before Germans during WWII, and Nazi forces going
fearless to occupy towards the neighboring European countries. But during that
warfare, three Dutch teenage girls got enlisted themselves into the Nazi Army,
to defeat and foil enemy plans. Of the three Dutch spies, two were sisters and
their names were Truus and Freddie Oversteege and remaining was Hannie
Schaft.
But what
made these Dutch girls to join Nazi? When they saw Dutch Royal Army surrendered
before Nazi, and subsequent control by Germany over nine million population of
the Netherlands, left no option but their innocent looks were guile before
Germans. Jews were next target before Nazi and intended to occupy their
foothold.
In their spy
mission, three Dutch turned spy girls took dangerous initiatives during reproduction
of fake identity cards after stealing German ID cards, they even distributed
fliers, announced protests, and circulated anti-Nazi literature. Sooner the
Dutch resistance movement was gaining stronger because of these three spy girls
who not only had to guide Jewish children to safe hide locations, but these
were paving the way in hoarding of weapons, explosion of bombs, killing of
German soldiers, Nazi locations spying.
As advance
daring takes a stunning turn before those spy girls, destination of completion
gets nearer.
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