Praise for Clare Mulley's The Spy Who Loved: "One of the most exciting books I've read this year."-- "The Spectator" "Brings alive a glamorous, swashbuckling heroine."-- "The Sunday Times (London)"
"A stunning biographical achievement."--Alison Weir, #1 New York Times bestselling author
"This book, massively researched and excitingly told, brings an extraordinary heroine back to life."-- "The Daily Mail"
"The astonishing story of an extraordinary woman--for so long silent and unseen bit now, thanks to Clare Mulley's forensic research and razor-sharp eye for detail, no longer forgotten."--Jonathan Freedland, author of The Escape Artist, The Many Who Broke Out of Auschwitz to Warn the World
"Agent Zo is a triumph. The deftly told life of this remarkable heroine helps restore women to their rightful place in the record of the Second World War. Absolutely essential reading."--Hallie Rubenhold, bestselling author of The Five
"This is a terrific story, told with passion and authority, about a Polish woman resistance fighter of extraordinary courage and ingenuity. Not simply a page turner, this is an important addition to the literature of World War Two, a story for our times about female heroism which should be widely known."--Anne Sebba, author of Ethel Rosenberg
"A remarkable story of resistance, elegantly told."--Roger Moorhouse, author of The Forgers
"Gripping, moving and important: an amazing and until-now neglected story of female WW2 heroism and secret derring-do. This tale of the resistance fighter Agent Zo is amazingly told and deeply researched by the excellent historian of WW2 espionage Clare Mulley."--Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of The World: A Family History of Humanity
"Celebration of a hero of the Polish resistance during World War II--whose work, because she was a woman, was long obscured. Elzbieta Zawacka was the only woman ever to be enlisted in the elite special forces of the Polish army in exile, who was parachuted into her Nazi-occupied homeland to help organize resistance fighters A well-told story from a little-known corner of World War II history."--Kirkus Reviews