Lit with Liberate: Paper Bullets by Jeffrey H. Jackson

Lit with Liberate: Paper Bullets by Jeffrey H. Jackson

Join the Lit with Liberate Reading Group

 

Lit with Liberate will meet inAugust to chat about Paper Bullets: Two Women Who Risked Their Lives to Defy the Nazis (discussed at the 2022 Guernsey Literary Festival). Multiple copies are available to borrow, please email Beth at [email protected] to reserve yours. We’ll have an optional drinks social at the Cock & Bull afterwards. 

**Zoom attendance possible, please let us know if you want to take part this way and we’ll send you the details** 

 

Paper Bullets is the first book to tell the history of an audacious anti-Nazi campaign undertaken by an unlikely pair: two French women, Lucy Schwob and Suzanne Malherbe, who drew on their skills as Parisian avant-garde artists to write and distribute “paper bullets”—wicked insults against Hitler, calls to rebel, and subversive fictional dialogues designed to demoralize Nazi troops occupying their adopted home on the British Channel Island of Jersey. Devising their own PSYOPS campaign, they slipped their notes into soldier’s pockets or tucked them inside newsstand magazines. 

 

Hunted by the secret field police, Lucy and Suzanne were finally betrayed in 1944, when the Germans imprisoned them, and tried them in a court martial, sentencing them to death for their actions. Ultimately they survived, but even in jail, they continued to fight the Nazis by reaching out to other prisoners and spreading a message of hope.  Better remembered today by their artist names, Claude Cahun and Marcel Moore, the couple’s actions were even more courageous because of who they were: lesbian partners known for cross-dressing and creating the kind of gender-bending work that the Nazis would come to call “degenerate art.” In addition, Lucy was half Jewish, and they had communist affiliations in Paris, where they attended political rallies with Surrealists and socialized with artists like Gertrude Stein. 

 

Paper Bullets is a compelling World War II story that has not been told before, about the galvanizing power of art, and of resistance. 

 

No booking required. If you haven’t read the book but want to come along for a taster of the book group, please do!