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Field Research Hannah Byron Field Research Hannah Byron

FIELD NOTE #3 — A Shift in Rhythm

As I walk and cycle these miles, the second book of The Ace of Nerve trilogy is growing. Aroha’s Māori heritage continues to anchor her character — not as a lesson, but as a quiet force shaping the way she sees the world. Every miles deepens her voice and her journey. Sometimes Nancy Wake is the echo and sometimes Aroha. Here’s a snippet…

From Ninety Mile Beach to the Waitangi Treaty Grounds — and my winter miles here in the Netherlands.

Postcards from the Trail

The past fortnight on Te Araroa took me from the endless sands of Ninety Mile Beach to the quiet beauty of Rainbow Falls and finally the significant carving at the Waitangi Treaty Grounds. All the while, my real-world miles unfolded here in the Netherlands — beside canals, lakes, and winter fields.

Here are the next four postcard pairs from my journey:

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Te Araroa: New Zealand Landscape 1

Ninety Mile Beach

My virtual journey continued down this legendary stretch: 55 miles of wind, surf, and soft sand. Even virtually, you get a sense of the endurance required. There’s something meditative about following a coastline that seems to never end. A place where the mind can wander — as mine often does — into Aroha’s world.

My Dutch Miles: Reflection 1

Maxima Canal, NL

Much like the beach miles in NZ, my rides along the Maxima Canal are rhythmic and steady. This bicycle has carried me more than 7,000 miles these past two years — my silent companion through all seasons and all drafts.

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Te Araroa : New Zealand Landscape 2

Ahipara Dunes

From flat sand to dramatic slopes, Ahipara brought a shift in energy. The long, steep climb rewards you with sweeping views of the bay, followed by the temptation of a wild ride down the dunes. Part challenge, part adventure — the perfect metaphor for writing the middle of a trilogy.

My Dutch Miles: Reflection 2

Van Zwietenpark, ’s-Hertogenbosch

This lake has become my personal Hyde Park. A short, gentle loop that clears the mind. I walk here when the writing is heavy or when I need a reminder that not all progress must be fast.

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Te Araroa : New Zealand Landscape 3

Rainbow Falls (Waianiwaniwa)

A softer moment on the trail. The Kerikeri River Track leads to a waterfall that feels almost suspended in stillness. This part of the postcard felt like a breath — the kind a writer takes when a story deepens and begins to speak back.

My Dutch Miles: Reflection 3

The River Meuse in Winter

A favourite spot for listening — geese, winter birds, the rustle of reeds, and the quiet conversations between wind and water. It’s often in places like this that a scene suddenly clicks into place.

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Te Araroa : New Zealand Landscape 4

Waitangi Treaty Grounds

Here, history steps forward. The carving shown on the postcard stands atop the Māori meeting house, Te Whare Rūnanga, and is thought to represent Kupe, the Polynesian explorer who discovered Aotearoa. Even virtually, this stop carries weight. A reminder of ancestral journeys, origins, and belonging — themes that weave through Aroha’s storyline.

My Dutch Miles: Reflection 4

A Cold Morning Hike

Proof that I really am moving my body while the kilometres advance on the virtual trail. Some mornings are frigid and slow, but I’m determined to “reach the South Island” one Dutch mile at a time.

 

Where The Trail Meets the Trilogy

As I walk and cycle these miles, the second book of The Ace of Nerve trilogy is growing. Aroha’s Māori heritage continues to anchor her character — not as a lesson, but as a quiet force shaping the way she sees the world. Every miles deepens her voice and her journey. Sometimes Nancy Wake is the echo and sometimes Aroha. Here’s a snippet.

Regret wastes powder and time.” Nancy replied curtly, “listen to me, Princess. You think denying the pull of your heart will make you strong. I tell you; it will only make you lonely. There’s a difference.”

The room seemed to hold its breath in the silence that followed. Outside, a breeze rippled the surface of the Thames, while a lone gull wrote a perfect arc against the leaden sky.

 “I can live with lonely.” Aroha’s voice came steady. “I can’t live with betraying what I am.”

Nancy regarded her for a long moment, respect slowly rising in the blue eyes. “Then be very sure, girl, which part of you is truly ‘what you are’ and which part is fear dressed as duty.”

A Note on Seasons

Winter is settling in here. The days are short, the nights long. My photos are turning as blue as my fingers, the air is crisp and sharp, and the pace a little slower, at times. But there’s beauty in this season — a softness that mirrors the quieter parts of the trail. And of life.

Until Next Time

Noho haumaru me te mahana

Blijf veilig en warm

Stay safe and warm

See you in the next Field Note.
— Hannah

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FIELD NOTE #2 — Steady Miles, New Rhythms

Choosing the Te Araroa challenge now seems like a God given.
It’s long, it’s beautiful, and it offers me a way to walk alongside the world of my characters while staying healthy here in the Netherlands.
Writing a novel is a marathon on its own. Writing a trilogy is a triple marathon. Some days you sprint; some days you inch forward. But what I’ve found — and what surprises me again and again — is how the rhythm of moving my body in nature helps the rhythm of writing.
As I make my way along the (virtual) coastline of Aotearoa, two things are happening…

Click to enlarge

Where I Am on the Trail This Week

Te Araroa — Maunganui Bluff → Ninety Mile Beach (42–74 km)
This stretch of the trail takes me along rugged coastline, soft sand, and long horizons. The postcard says it all: wild cliffs, shifting weather, and beach full of boulders, which is both beautiful and tiring.

At home — Maaspoort at night in ‘s-Hertogenbosch
Meanwhile, my real miles happened closer to home: an evening walk beneath tree-lined paths, a quick stop at the mall for some groceries, and a moment of wonder about the reflections of neon in still water. And then back home to write another scene in my pleasantly  warm office.

Why I’m Doing These Virtual Challenges
I’ve been walking, cycling, and hiking for years, but for the longest time those miles just lived quietly in my legs and my day-to-day life.
Then, two years ago, I discovered The Conqueror Virtual Challenges, and something clicked.

Suddenly those invisible miles became stories: Paris, the Lake District, Los Angeles, India, Lands End to John O’Groats… and now, Aotearoa New Zealand.

This isn’t just about fitness for me. It’s about rhythm, grounding, fresh air, and the reminder that steady steps — even small ones — can take you across whole continents if you let them.

I’m decorating my wall with my medals. They’re not just trophies; they’re also markers of my endurance and my unquenchable curiosity. I’m truly an airchair traveller. Soon, I’m adding New York (my last challenge) and I will show you how exquisite these medals really are.

Choosing the Te Araroa challenge now seems like a God given.
It’s long, it’s beautiful, and it offers me a way to walk alongside the world of my characters while staying healthy here in the Netherlands.

 

Click to enlarge

 

3. How My Te Araroa Trail into The Ace of Nerve Trilogy

Writing a novel is a marathon on its own. Writing a trilogy is a triple marathon. Some days you sprint; some days you inch forward. But what I’ve found — and what surprises me again and again — is how the rhythm of moving my body in nature helps the rhythm of writing.

As I make my way along the (virtual) coastline of Aotearoa, two things are happening:

  • Aroha becomes clearer to me — her grounding calm, her connection to land, her quiet resilience.

  • Nancy sharpens — her contradictions, her bravado, the shadows she hides with charm.

There’s something about a long-distance trail, even a virtual one, that opens a door in the mind. Scenes settle. Voices become steady. Characters start speaking when they’re ready.

I’ll share more about Aroha’s early chapters soon, but for now, I’m letting the miles work their magic.

Weather, Mood, and the Week’s Small Things

Here in Brabant, the weather has slipped decisively into late November: damp mornings, early twilight, and a cold that makes you tuck your scarf tighter.
Yet there’s beauty in it too: the glow of streetlamps on wet pavement filled with autumn leaves, the quiet of a near-empty park, the mirrored stillness of a gazillion stars at the firmament.

These changes will color the photos I take over the coming months. Winter, spring, and eventually summer will each leave their own impression on the journey.

Until Next Time

Steady steps, warm layers, and pages waiting to be written.
More postcards soon — both from Aotearoa and from my corner of the Netherlands.

Kia tau te rangimārie — Ga in vrede — May peace settle upon you.
— Hannah

 

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FIELD NOTE #1 — Where the Trail Begins

Although Nancy Wake’s New Zealand years were brief — she left young — she was born there. That’s the quiet thread between her life and Aroha’s. And this trail lets me walk that thread gently.
How My Araroa Trail Supports the Ace of Nerve Trilogy
As I’ll be writing write the second book over the coming months, the trail will be my rhythm: miles for thinking, miles for untangling scenes, miles for letting the characters come forward when they’re ready.
Aroha’s voice in particular feels clearer when I’m moving. There’s something grounding in walking her homeland — even virtually.

Click to enlarge

Where I Am on the Trail This Week

Every journey has a beginning.
For Te Araroa, that beginning lies at Cape Reinga, at the northern tip of Aotearoa New Zealand — a place rich with Māori meaning, where the spirits are said to leave this world and begin their path home.

And for me here in the Netherlands, my starting point is far more familiar:
the River Meuse, the long winding waterway, that has its origin in the Plateau des Langres in France, and where I walk, cycle, and gather most of my miles.

These two places could not be more different.
Yet they now run side by side — one in my imagination, one under my feet.

Why I’m Doing This Trail — And Why Now

Movement has always kept me steady: long walks, quiet bike rides, treadmill miles on a rainy day. But for years, I never tracked them.

Two years ago, I discovered The Conqueror Challenges, and suddenly my uncounted miles became something I could see:
badges, postcards, medals — little markers of endurance.

Now I’m taking on their longest challenge yet — Te Araroa, 3,177 km from the top of New Zealand to the bottom.

Why choose this trail now?
Because I’m writing this trilogy — The Ace of Nerve — and one of its central voices, Aroha Tui, carries her heritage from Aotearoa.
Walking this trail feels like the right way to stay connected to her world while living here in Brabant, Netherlands.

And although Nancy Wake’s New Zealand years were brief — she left young — she was born there. That’s the quiet thread between her life and Aroha’s. And this trail lets me walk that thread gently.

How My Araroa Trail Supports the Ace of Nerve Trilogy

As I’ll be writing write the second book over the coming months, the trail will be my rhythm:

  • miles for thinking,

  • miles for untangling scenes,

  • miles for letting the characters come forward when they’re ready.

Aroha’s voice in particular feels clearer when I’m moving. There’s something grounding in walking her homeland — even virtually.

Weather, Mood & This Week’s Small Things

Here in Brabant, November has fully settled in: grey skies, bright breaks of cold sun, a hush over the fields near the Meuse.
It’s the kind of weather that makes you walk briskly, hands tucked into your pockets, woolen hat, always thinking about what comes next. The warm cup of coffee when I return.

There’s a quiet beauty in starting something big in the stillness of the last part of 2025.

Until Next Time

This is where the journey begins — in Aotearoa and in ‘s-Hertogenbosch.

Kia haumaru te haere — Goede reis — Safe travels.
— Hannah

 

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The Miracle of Empel: An Unconventional Christmas Tale

For the exceptional tale of The Miracle of Empel (Milagro de Empel in Spanish) we’re – for once - not talking about the Second World War but about the Eighty Years’ War which raged between Spain and Holland in the 16th century.
The Miracle of Empel happened in my backyard here in the Netherlands, so let me share this amazing field trip experience.

Introduction
For the exceptional tale of The Miracle of Empel (Milagro de Empel in Spanish) we’re – for once - not talking about the Second World War but about the Eighty Years’ War which raged between Spain and Holland in the 16th century.

The Miracle of Empel happened in my backyard here in the Netherlands, so let me share this amazing Spanish victory over the Dutch on 8 December 1585. The miracle is still celebrated every year by Spaniards flocking to the shores of the river Meuse. This year, on 8 December 2023, I experienced the first part of this remarkable ceremony down by the river.

 

Visiting the Event on 8 December

 

Background
How did the Immaculate Conception become the Patroness saint of Spain and of the Spanish Armed Forces?

In December 1585, the Spanish soldiers of the Tercio Viejo de Zamora found themselves surrounded in Empel, a town on the river Meuse in the Netherlands, after the Dutch rebels opened the dikes and water flooded the entire area.

When all seemed lost, a Spanish soldier found a panel with the image of the Immaculate Conception, surely hidden by local Catholics to keep it safe from the image destruction campaign unleashed by the Calvinists.

Spanish soldiers, seeking the Immaculate Conception's protection, witnessed a miraculous event: a sudden icy wind descended upon the river Meuse, freezing the water. This enabled the Tercio Viejo of Zamora to break the siege and triumph over the terrified rebels, a moment now known as the Miracle of Empel.

From that day forward, the Immaculate Conception became the guardian of the Spanish Tercios. In 1892, she was officially declared the Patroness of the Spanish Infantry, a title she had held unofficially for centuries. Additionally, the Immaculate Conception holds various other patronages within the Spanish Army.

 

Obsessi apud Bommeliam Hispani Anno 1585 - The Spaniards were driven out of the Bommelerwaard by breaking the dikes 1585

 

Since 2004, the Spanish Army has made it a custom to pay tribute to its patron saint in that Dutch town where the miracle occurred. The soldiers taking part are stationed at the Allied Joint Force Headquarters in Brunssum in the Netherlands.

Hundreds of Spanish citizens from all over Europe flock to the, now tiny, village of Empel on this Holy Day of The Immaculate Conception to celebrate their patron and their historic victory.

 

The Empel Maria

The Empel Chapel

 

On 8 December 2000 a small chapel was erased in Empel on the place where all earlier Empel Catholic churches stood. The last church was bombed in WW2. From the ceremony on the river, the Spaniards paid tribute to the chapel and then went to a communal Mass in New Empel.

On YouTube you can watch more on this ceremony (in Spanish). Below is a short explanation of the videos.

 

Video 1: Speech by Army Infantry Commander Javier Pontijas on the banks of the Meuse River, held in the place where the miracle of Empel occurred.

 
 

Video 2: Lieutenant General Luis Lanchares Dávila, second chief of HQ JFC Brunssum, addressing a few words to those attending the event, after which the facts of the Miracle of Empel are explained.

 
 

Video 3: Speech by the Military Bishop General of the Netherlands, Monsignor Everard de Jong, accompanied by the Episcopal Vicar of the Ministry of Defense of Spain, Francisco Javier de la Vega Fernández.

 
 

Video 4: The beautiful singing of the Spanish Infantry Hymn and the "Salve Regina", a hymn dedicated to the Virgin Mary, in front of the Empel chapel.

 
 

The Miracle of Empel seen with my own eyes

 
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From The Crystal Butterfly to The London Spymaker

Field trip to Canadian War Cemetery at Groesbeek and last week to read - as sneak peek - the first chapters of The London Spymaker!

Two months ago, I shared a video (link below) on YouTube, recounting the remarkable liberation of Amsterdam in May 1945. Little did I expect it would capture the hearts and minds of 54,000 viewers, many of whom were touched by the heroics of their Canadian relatives, who played a pivotal role in Holland's liberation. All these reactions from viewers ignited a spark in me, and made me think with even more fondness why I wrote my book on the Dutch Resistance, "The Crystal Butterfly." In the 7th book in The Resistance Girl Series, our heroine, Edda Van der Valk (then Edda Valkena), joins in the jubilation of Amsterdam's liberation.

The popularity of the old Dutch news reel also evoked a profound sense of gratitude in me towards the brave Canadians, Brits, Americans, Australians, and others who landed on Normandy's beaches on that historic day of June 6, 1944 to begin their relentless march northward. It spanned eleven grueling months and was marked by countless sacrifices before the European Continent was liberated from Hitler's Third Reich. How the SOE secret agents played a vital role in assisting the Allied forces with their sabotage actions will be at the core of my new series “Timeless Spies”, coming in 2024.

At an hour’s drive from where I live lies the Canadian War Cemetery at Groesbeek, Netherlands. Two weeks’ ago, on a sunny Sunday, I went on a field trip to honor these young heroes who gave their lives for our cherished freedom. Over 7,600 Canadian soldiers died for the liberation of Holland, and 2,331 of them found their eternal rest at Groesbeek. It stands as an immense Canadian Commonwealth Cemetery, with a minority of other nationalities interred alongside.

The original Canadian cemetery 1946

The Canadian cemetery 1947

My fascination with the Secret Operations Executive (SOE), as discussed in last week's blog, led me to discover that two of the five Canadian secret agents who were murdered in concentration camps while serving in the French section of SOE are commemorated on one pillar at this graveyard. That was my second motivation to pay a visit and pay tribute.

I also reached out to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission and became a Foundation member, granting me the opportunity to contribute to their vital work. It puzzled me that the records showed that three agents were commemorated at Groesbeek - Pickersgill, Sabourin Biéler (correct spelling) -, whereas I could only find two names. (See photo left). The War Graves Commission told me that WW2 casualties with no known graves, like these five agents, may only be commemorated in one location. Where Biéler is commemorated elsewhere I’m still in the process of finding out. Considering that all 104 fallen agents of the French Section are commemorated on the Valencay Memorial in France (see last week’s post), the French memorial is not classified as a Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery. A valuable lesson learnt.

Mind you, these men are heroes of the highest class. They fought alone!

The author at Groesbeek, left of me you can see the two agents’ names

The 5 Canadian SOE agents who died in concentration camps

I invite you to watch my visit to Groesbeek through the video linked below, and I'm excited to share that you have one more week to download and read for free the first chapters of "The London Spymaker," set to be released next March.

 
 

Video visit to Groesbeek Cemetery

 
 

Video liberation of Amsterdam

 
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The link between The London Spymaker and SOE

Read the rough draft of the first chapters of The London Spymaker! It will give you a taste of the history and research behind Anna’s story and SOE. The book is on preorder and will be available on 7 March 2024.

As I’m writing the last book in The Resistance Girl Series (for now), I’m already transitioning to what I’m going to specialize in for probably the rest of my writing career. The secret agents of SOE, an abbreviation for the Secret Operations Executive. A name and organization as shrouded in mystery as its non-descript name.

 

Hannah at SOE plaque in Beaulieu

 

In book 7 in The Resistance Girl Series, titled The London Spymaker, I’m already deeply invested in SOE, the British organization Winston Churchill launched in July 1940 “to set Europe Ablaze” with irregular warfare and sabotage actions. Flight officer Anna Adams in The London Spymaker, though fictive, is based on Vera Atkins’ remarkable position at the London-based organization, as the second person behind Colonel Maurice Buckmaster, the head of SOE’s French section.

 
Vera Atkins

Vera Atkins

 

From 1941 till after D-Day in June 1944 some 400 Section F agents were dropped into France. 109 of them didn’t survive the arrests, torture, and murder by the Gestapo. Most of these heroic agents, who came from all walks of life, were killed in concentration camps. Of the 40 brave women, whom SOE started recruiting in 1942 as women could more easily blend in with the French population and were less likely to be stopped by the Germans, 13 did not survive their missions. 104 of these agents are commemorated on the Valencay Memorial in France, which I will certainly visit in person one day and tell you all about.

 

Valencay memorial for SOE French Section

 

With Anna’s story, we start at the end of the second World War as she flies to post-war Germany in search of her “missing agents.” In the chaos after the liberation, with hundreds of thousands of bewildered and traumatized holocaust survivors trying to find their way to safety, it was often unclear what had happened to political prisoners, especially these agents whom Hitler had branded the worst enemies of the Third Reich. They fell in the “Nacht und Nebel” category, people the Nazis didn’t want to leave any trace of where they’d gone (Night and Fog), so their families would never know what had happened to them.

 
SOE badge
 

Anna not only attends the opening of the Nuremburg trials in November 1945, she also interrogates arrested camp commanders from Ravensbrück and Sachsenhausen to find out about the fate of “her girls”. The real Vera Atkins made it her life’s mission after the war to trace all the agents so she could tell their families what had happened to them.


To give you a taste of the history and research behind Anna’s story, you can read the rough draft of the first chapters of The London Spymaker here. The book is on preorder and will be available on 7 March 2024.

 
The London Spymaker sneak peek

The London Spymaker sneak peek - click to download

 

Next week I will tell you about my visit to the Canadian War Cemetery in Groesbeek, where 2 of the 5 French-Canadian SOE male agents are commemorated. Though I intend to start my new series “Timeless Spies” (2024) with the female agents, in time I’d like to honour the brave men as well. What’s more, they usually worked together in teams.

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In the footsteps of Audrey Hepburn

Visiting the places where Audrey Hepburn lived during WW2: Arnhem and Velp.

For my final blog for Book 6 in the Resistance Girl Series, The Crystal Butterfly, I spent a day in the footsteps of the famous 20th century actress Audrey Hepburn. During her life, little was known about her war years as a teenager in The Netherlands, but one of her more recent biographers, Robert Matzen, together with Audrey’s youngest son, Luca Dotti, unraveled most of the mysteries around this period in the moving and impressive biography Dutch Girl. Audrey Hepburn and World War II.

 

Robert Matzen's Dutch Girl, Audrey Hepburn and World War II

 

I read Robert’s book as part of my research for my own book on a ballerina under German occupation in The Netherlands. And also, because I’ve been a lifelong fan of Audrey Hepburn. Robert’s detailed description of Audrey’s life in Oosterbeek (before the war), Arnhem and ultimately Velp, three places in the Province of Gelderland, made me decide to visit all the places where she either lived or spent (dancing) time. 

Come with me on my trip.

 

Field trip to Oosterbeek, Velp & Arnhem in the footsteps of Audrey Hepburn

 

There’s just one aspect of Robert’s book, which I highly recommend, by the way, I want to touch on because I’m not sure many people knew this about Audrey. She, herself, had a lifelong admiration and tender spot for Anne Frank, who in a way was her soul-sister. After the liberation in 1945, Audrey moved to Amsterdam with her mother so that she could take dance lessons with the famous Sonia Gaskell. 

They happened to live in the same building as the editor working on Anne Frank’s Diary. Audrey was the first to read this moving account of a girl only six weeks apart in age. She was also among the very first to visit “Het Achterhuis” on the Prinsengracht, where the Frank family hid until they were betrayed. 

Of course, Audrey heard when the Diary of A Young Girl became an instant bestseller in America. Then she was asked to portray Anne in George Stevens’ 1958 movie on the Jewish girl who died in Bergen-Belsen. Typically, the thoughtful and emphatic Audrey refused the role. Even after meeting up with Anne’s father Otto in Switzerland, who asked her to reconsider, Audrey declined. The war and its scars were still too raw for her. And how could she accept money for a role about a girl who felt like a sister to her but who hadn’t survived the war?

However, in the 1980s Audrey went on a tour through the US to give readings of Anne’s Diary in her function as a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador. And thus, raised money for the organization that meant everything to her.

I wanted to share with you this story of Anne and Audrey to round off my series of blogs for The Crystal Butterfly.

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

There is no mention of Audrey Hepburn in my own book, of course, as Edda–my main character - was unaware of that budding film star and ballerina - who would capture the hearts of millions a decade later - living in the same country as she was. But there are many similarities. Both are dark-haired ballerinas, resilient girls that strive for the top. Both have parents that embrace Hitler’s Nazism, and both come from Frisian nobility. 

Here's the link to Robert’s book Dutch Girl:
https://www.amazon.com/Dutch-Girl-Audrey-Hepburn-World-ebook/dp/B07MSCBVBJ/
(Amazon US store but I’m sure it’s available everywhere)

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In the footsteps of Anne Frank in Amsterdam…

Visiting the places where Anne Frank lived during WW2 in Amsterdam.
Anne Frank's importance for the world stems from her powerful and poignant account of her life in hiding during the Holocaust, documented in her now-famous diary, "The Diary of a Young Girl." Why was the voice of a teenage girl so significant?

Though Anne doesn’t play an active role in my fictive book on the Dutch resistance and Jewish persecution in WW2, “The Crystal Butterfly”, she is an important symbol of Holland in WW2. No wonder, that her name came up time and time again in my research. Both in Amsterdam and in transit Camp Westerbork. 

Partly to honour Anne, I have my main character, Edda, keep a diary as well. But Edda, who is not Jewish but the daughter of collaborators and a resistance fighter, only writes what she witnesses around her during the Nazi occupation. So it’s not a personal diary like Anne’s.

Also, Edda is at almost the same time in Transit Camp Westerbork, when Anne briefly stayed there with her family before being transported to the German concentration camps. 

Enough reason for me to go to Amsterdam and visit the two places where Anne lived and the one place where she is commemorated with all other 120,000 murdered Jews, Sintis and Romas. Will you join me in her footsteps? 

 

Field trip to Amsterdam. In the Footsteps of Anne Frank…

 

But what is – in a nutshell - Anne Frank’s legacy?

Anne Frank's importance for the world stems from her powerful and poignant account of her life in hiding during the Holocaust, documented in her now-famous diary, "The Diary of a Young Girl." Why was the voice of a teenage girl so significant?

 
 

Symbol of the Holocaust
Anne Frank's diary provides a personal and relatable perspective on the horrors of the Holocaust. Through her writing, she humanizes the millions of victims and gives a voice to the countless innocent lives lost during World War II.

Impact on Education
Anne's diary has become an essential educational tool in schools worldwide. It helps students learn about the Holocaust, discrimination, and the consequences of hatred, fostering empathy and understanding.

Testament to Resilience
Despite facing extreme hardship, Anne's diary reflects her resilience and optimism. Her courage and determination to keep hope alive amid despair serve as an inspiration to people facing difficult situations.

Human Rights Advocacy
Anne Frank's story has become a symbol for promoting human rights, tolerance, and inclusivity. Her words remind us of the importance of standing against prejudice, discrimination, and injustice.

Preservation of History
Anne's diary provides a first-hand account of life during the Holocaust, preserving an important historical record for future generations.

Global Recognition
The Anne Frank House in Amsterdam, where Anne and her family hid, is now a museum attracting millions of visitors each year. This international attention helps ensure that her story reaches people from all walks of life.

Cultural Impact
Anne's diary has been translated into numerous languages, making her story accessible to people around the world. It has also inspired various adaptations, including plays, films, and other literary works.

Unfinished Potential
Anne Frank's untimely death at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in 1945, shortly before the camp's liberation, serves as a poignant reminder of the potential that was lost due to hatred and intolerance.

In summary, Anne Frank's significance lies in her ability to humanize the Holocaust and serve as a beacon of hope, education, and inspiration for generations to come. Her enduring legacy reminds us of the importance of promoting understanding, compassion, and the protection of human rights.

Anne Frank statue Merwedeplein

Significant Anne Frank sites

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WW2 Field Research to "Mussert's Wall" Netherlands

I invite you to join me on my field trip to Mussert’s Wall. Anton Mussert was the leader of the NSB. Learn more about World War 2 in Holland, about the Dutch NSB Party and Collaboration during WW2.

Unveiling the Dark Pages of History: The Dutch NSB Party and Collaboration during World War 2 in Holland.

In an upcoming blog I will shed light on the rise of De Nationaal-Socialistische Beweging, the National Socialist Movement (NSB), in the Netherlands before and during World War 2 and its collaboration with Hitler’s Germany.

The most controversial part of writing The Crystal Butterfly for me was Edda’s parents’ membership of the NSB and their support of Hitler’s ideology. I strongly felt, though–when writing a book on Holland in WW2–collaboration needed to be addressed. Most Dutch people remained neutral during the war, a small yet active part resisted and quite a significant number actively collaborated with the Nazis, whether or not they were a member of the NSB.

I went on a field trip to Mussert’s Wall. Anton Mussert was the leader of the NSB. I invite you to join me on my field trip using the video below.

 

In 2018 after a lot of debate it was decided that this wall shouldn’t be taken down, as it is an important remembrance for people what happened here. On my photograph you can see what it looks like today and compare it to when it was used over 80 years ago.

Mussert's Wall in 1940

Mussert's Wall in 2023

Feel free to comment below. Share your thoughts, knowledge, experiences. All appreciated!
And stay tuned for more research on WW2 in the Netherlands.

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2023: the birth of a new book

New book, but also a new home and a new website. Years of research on European countries during World Wars NOT lost, and more to come! Did you know about Audrey Hepburn’s Dutch war years?

Since book 5 in The Resistance Girl Series, The Highland Raven, came out, I took a short break from writing about my main topic World War 2. In the interim I launched a new historical detective series, titled The Mrs Imogene Lynch Series. I also moved to another part of Holland at the end of December ‘22 and became a first-time grandmother in January. All very exciting but very distracting from my WW2 writing schedule! :-)

In January 2023 I began writing The Crystal Butterfly, my newest book in The Resistance Girl Series. This book is about the Dutch Resistance. It was a Godsent to be able this time to do all my groundwork ‘around the corner’ and I’ll share plenty of my (on the spot) research with you on this blog.

I took the time to deep-dive into the new story and get to the heart of my heroine’s journey before and during WW2. Her name is Edda Van der Valk and in The Crystal Butterfly she will take you through her Dutch war years.

As I now live close to Den Bosch - which is in the centre of Holland - I can easily travel to the most important places of action during WW2 in this country. So let me take you with me on my field trips as I retrace my steps to that gruesome part of our history, now some 80 years ago.

Few people living through WW2 are still with us today. The medalled-up veterans and bravely surviving Jews have become sparse centenaries, whose live presence in TV shows and newspaper articles are almost non-existent. WW2 is now almost history, lived through by the generation of our parents, grandparents, great-grandparents. But I still feel it is my duty to keep the history alive LEST WE FORGET.

The Crystal Butterfly is also inspired by - though far from identical to - Audrey Hepburn’s Dutch war years, so I’ll take you to places where she lived and spent some of the most arduous years of her life. And, of course, Anne Frank cannot be ignored in a book that is centred heavily on the deportations of Dutch-based Jewish people. After all, the arrest of Edda’s big love, Asher Hoffmann, was her reason for joining the Resistance.

Click here to pre order on Amazon

PS For avid readers of my blog you may notice I have a new website and miss the abundant archive of years of research on many European countries during the World Wars. Fear not for it will return in an even clearer and more user friendly way.



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Field Research, WW2 History, Book news Hannah Byron Field Research, WW2 History, Book news Hannah Byron

Hello Reader

Welcome to Historical Facts & Fiction. Here imagination meets reality. I created this blog as a space to assemble my own research that had no place in my World War novels. Find out more about the background to The Resistance Girl Series!

Welcome to Historical Facts & Fiction. Here imagination meets reality. I created this blog as a space to assemble my own research that had no place in my World War novels. I hope you’ll enjoy finding out more about the background to The Resistance Girl Series.

Titbits of research certainly have their place in historical fiction, but when it becomes info dump, it’s too much. But in a blog there’s enough space to share all in-depth investigations and fieldwork to my heart’s content. 

Most Historical Fiction readers are fervent researchers themselves; half the fun of reading a good HF novel is popping onto the net to fact-check what you’ve just read. You simply must know if SOE really had women spies, or if Eva Braun actually married Hitler hours before joining him in death. The internet is our treasure trove. I know I can’t stop myself, and love learning a thing or two in the process.

 
 

Have you ever wondered where HF authors get their ideas for a new book or series, or how they do their research? No two HF authors are alike – of course – but we all do rely heavily on today’s search engines. No work gets done without it.

However, as you’ll read in an upcoming blog post, my reason for starting The Resistance Girl Series was a family photo I found by chance. Curiosity is a good start. As a European with lineage in several countries, I not only study the lives of these people. They are in my bloodline.

 

My Great-uncles William and Jack Westcott

 

But it wasn’t just my uncles’ photograph that incited me to write In Picardy’s Fields. It may sound terrible to say - and I won’t do so aloud - but I love the World Wars. For me as a fiction writer these intense and dark periods in recent human history provide the greatest canvas on which to splash my stories, in an endless variety; this was the period – par excellence – in which ordinary people performed extraordinary deeds. And we all love us a decent hero(ine)!

I’m never tired of learning more about the first half of the 20th century and how it’s shaped our current society. So, please permit me to infect you with some of that passion. 

Next to online studies, you can also join me on my field trips to various countries while I do my onsite research.

On to the first blog now…

Thank you for being here!

 
 
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