Wendell Smith covered sports, history and civil rights and traveled with Jackie Robinson. But I’m so tired of the fact that they never have a female protagonist. I started thinking: What if I wrote about an American woman involved with the war? I love John le Carré’s espionage stories and books like “Day of the Jackal” (by Frederick Forsyth). And over the years, I accumulated all these little notebooks (of research) with things that didn’t fit into the Aimée books. When I first went to Paris at 18, I was struck by all the layers of (war) history there - walls pockmarked with bullet holes and so much more. My family served, and I heard a lot of stories growing up. Q What motivated you to break from your mystery series for a stand-alone period piece?Ī I’ve always been fascinated by World War II. It’s like Audrey Hepburn said: “Paris is always a good idea.” I just love it, and I don’t think I have an idealized view of it. Q So why does Paris have such a hold on you?Ī Apart from me wanting to go there more and more? I don’t know. And her latest novel, “Three Hours in Paris,” is a riveting World War II thriller that follows Kate Rees, a young American markswoman recruited by British intelligence to drop into occupied France and pull off a perilous mission: assassinate Adolf Hitler. All 19 of her popular Aimée Leduc mystery books are set in the City of Light - each rooted in a different neighborhood. Best-selling author Cara Black may live in San Francisco, but she left her heart in Paris.
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