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The Librarians of Lisbon

A WWII Story of Love and Espionage

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The Librarians of Lisbon

By: Suzanne Nelson
Narrated by: Alex Picard
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About this listen

“A fast-paced roller-coaster ride of deceit, espionage, danger, and—above all—the unbreakable bonds of friendship. This tense page-turner peels back new layers in the complexities of World War II espionage as it hurtles toward its satisfying finish.”—New York Times bestselling author Kristin Harmel

Lisbon 1943. As two American librarians are drawn into a city of dangerous subterfuge and unexpected love affairs, they are forced to choose between their missions and the men they love. Inspired by real historical figures, award-winning author Suzanne Nelson pens a captivating story of two remarkable women, their bravery and heartache, and a friendship that withstands the ravages of war.

WWII rages Europe. Lisbon stands alone as a glamorous city on the brink of chaos, harboring spies trading double-edged secrets. Among them are Selene Delmont and Beatrice Sullivan, Boston librarians turned Allied operatives. Officially enlisted to collect banned books, both women are undercover agents tasked with infiltrating the Axis spy network.

Victory is not guaranteed.

Soon, they’re caught up in games of deception with two of Lisbon’s most notorious men—the outcast Portuguese baron, Luca Caldeira, and the lethal spy, code name Gable. As Selene charms her way through lavish ballrooms with Luca, the more bookish Bea is plunged into Gable’s shadowy world of informants. But when a betrayal unravels a carefully spun web of lies, everything they’ve fought for is thrown into jeopardy. As Selene and Bea are pushed to their breaking points can their friendship, and their hearts, survive the cost of war?

©2025 Suzanne Nelson (P)2025 Zando, LLC
20th Century Espionage Historical Historical Fiction Spies & Politics Thriller & Suspense World War II & Holocaust Portugal Heartfelt War

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Lightweight

Lightweight novel, narrated poorly and why don’t American authors ever check facts properly…persistent reference to MI15 however in 1943 when the novel is set MI15, the British Military Intelligence Section 15 (now defunct), was a department of the British Directorate of Military Intelligence, part of the War Office. It was set up in 1942 to handle aerial photography. In 1943 this function was transferred to the air ministry and MI15 became responsible for the coordination of intelligence about enemy anti-aircraft facilities. The novel doesn’t actually reflect that.

References
Clayton, Anthony (1993). Forearmed: a history of the Intelligence Corps. Brassey's. p. 83.

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