Summary and Reviews of Women of War by Suzanne Cope

Women of War by Suzanne Cope

Women of War

The Italian Assassins, Spies, and Couriers Who Fought the Nazis

by Suzanne Cope
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  • Apr 29, 2025, 480 pages
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About This Book

Book Summary

The gripping, true, and untold history of the Italian anti-fascist resistance during World War II, told through the stories of four spectacularly courageous women fighters.

From underground soldiers to intrepid spies, Women of War unearths the hidden history of the brave women who risked their lives to overthrow the Nazi occupation and liberate Italy. Using primary sources and brand new scholarship, historian Suzanne Cope illuminates the roles played by women while Italians struggled under dual foes: Nazi invaders and Italian fascist loyalists.

Cope's research and storytelling introduces four brave and resourceful women who risked everything to overthrow the Nazi occupation and pry their future from the fascist grasp. We meet Carla Capponi in Rome, where she made bombs in an underground bunker then ferried them to their deadly destination wearing lipstick and a trenchcoat; and Bianca Guidetti Serra who rode her bicycle up switchbacks in the Alps, dodging bullets while delivering bags of clandestine newspapers and munitions to the anti-fascist armies hidden in the mountains. In Florence, the young future author of Italy's new constitution, Teresa Mattei, carried secret messages and hid bombs; while Anita Malavasi led troops across the Apennine Mountains. Women of War brings their experiences as underground resistance fighters, partisan combatants, spies, and saboteurs to life.

Essential and original, Women of War offers not only a reexamination of the elision of women from vital WWII history but also a valuable perspective on the ongoing fight for gender equality and social justice. After all, these were the women who launched a feminist movement as they fought for the future of their country, and what that could mean for its women, all while under Nazi and fascist fire.

Chapter 1
Teresa
Milan and Florence
1929-1938

Teresa Mattei was eight when she slipped behind the curtain of the dark paneled confessional booth for her First Penance. She knelt and craned her neck upward, directing her girlhood indiscretions through the lattice to the priest waiting behind the curtain on the other side. The layers of thick fabric and rich wood were intended for anonymity between parishioner and priest. To atone for whatever she admitted that day, the priest prescribed three Hail Marys to the Pope.

Teresa responded, "Ma il Papa e un porco!"-"But the Pope is a pig!"

The priest jumped out of the confessional booth and pulled back the curtain on the other side.

"Who told you such nonsense?" he demanded of the dark-eyed little girl.

"I don't believe in you," Teresa responded defiantly; she had been taught since she was young about the dangerous friendship of the Pope and Mussolini. "I believe in my father."


Perhaps it is telling that Teresa was born in February 1921-just ...

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Reviews

BookBrowse Review

BookBrowse

Suzanne Cope brings to light a complex facet of an otherwise well-known war in her nonfiction account Women of War: The Italian Assassins, Spies, and Couriers Who Fought the Nazis. But political machinations and military maneuvers are not at the heart of this story. Instead, Cope humanizes the conflict through the experiences of four women who played crucial roles on and off the battlefield, and she shows how women were integral to the fight for freedom and a new political direction in post-Fascist Italy. For anyone interested in how fascism and totalitarianism are actually brought down, this book will provide an eye-opening lesson in the bravery and equality it takes to achieve victory...continued

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(Reviewed by Rose Rankin).

Media Reviews

Kirkus Reviews
An inspiring, illuminating group biography.

Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Journalist Cope spins a thrilling saga of four young women of the Italian resistance...Cope's narrative rivets as she tracks how the young women escalated their efforts; one woman, who at her first resistance meeting was asked to play Chopin to cover the partisans' voices, ends up a key member of a hit squad...It makes for a captivating look at how antifascist resistance operated and evolved during WWII.

Author Blurb Julie Satow, New York Times bestselling author of When Women Ran Fifth Avenue
Suzanne Cope has uncovered the gripping accounts of brave female partisans whose efforts in Italy during the Second World War made a crucial difference between victory and defeat. Whether hiding bombs beneath dresses, dodging bullets while swimming among the waves, or falling in love and forming friendships, these women's stories are a much needed addition to the war narrative, and through her dogged research, Suzanne has brought them vividly to life.

Author Blurb Olivia Campbell, New York Times bestselling author of Women in White Coats and Sisters in Science
A deeply researched and sublimely cinematic tale about regular people making a difference and standing up to fascism, Women of War is an inspiring read that's also highly relevant today. I stand in awe of the bravery of these tenacious women and of Cope's skill in telling their incredible stories.

Reader Reviews

Feri

The courageous Women who resisted the nazis
Women of War by Suzanne Cope is a powerful and deeply moving account of the brave Italian women who risked everything to fight against the Nazi occupation during World War II. The book focuses on assassins, spies, and couriers—roles often overlooked ...   Read More

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Beyond the Book



A Women in Resistance Reading List

Book Jackets of Titles Mentioned in the Reading List

Suzanne Cope's Women of War details the efforts of four female resistance fighters in Italy during World War II, but it also highlights the efforts of countless unnamed women who supported revolutionary efforts. For those interested in learning more about the role of women in resistance movements, the following books explore stories on and off the battlefield:

Nonfiction

Liberty, Equality, Fashion: The Women Who Styled the French Revolution by Anne Higonnet
While not an exhaustive history of the French Revolution, this book describes how revolutionaries like Térézia Tallien and Juliette Récamier actively participated in anti-monarchical activities and survived stints in jail during the Reign of Terror. ...

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