Noreen Riols

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Noreen Riols
Noreen Riols, Valençay, mai 2012.jpg
Riols in 2012
Born
Noreen Baxter

(1926-05-08) 8 May 1926 (age 95)
OccupationNovelist

Noreen Riols (née Baxter, 8 May 1926) is a British novelist. During the Second World War, she worked for the Special Operations Executive, a British espionage and sabotage organisation.

Life and career[]

Riols was born in 1926 in Malta, where her father was serving in the Royal Navy.[1] She studied at the French Lycée in London, and at age 17 she applied to join the Women's Royal Naval Service (Wrens). Because of her fluency in French, she was instead recruited into the F-section (F=France) of the Special Operations Executive (SOE).[1][2] The F-section recruited and trained spies and agents to be dropped into France where they would sabotage Nazi operations and support the French Resistance.[2] SOE training took place at a number of locations around Britain including Beaulieu in the New Forest.[2] Riols was "trained and was eventually based at the organisation's headquarters in The Mall and at the training camp in the New Forest".[3] Her role was to train agents in activities such as passing messages covertly or how to follow someone, and to act as a decoy in scenarios created to test agents.[2][4]

Noreen Riols, 2013

After the war she worked for the BBC World Service and trained as a nurse.[3] She lived in Romania, moving to Paris in 1956 where she worked as a journalist.[3] She married a Frenchman and had five children, and holds dual French and British nationality.[3][5][6]

She wrote four novels (the Ardnakil Chronicles) based on her experiences in SOE: Katherine,[3] To live again, Before the dawn and Where love endures. In Eye of the Storm she wrote about how her faith helped alleviate her depression.[5]

In 2014 she published a memoir of her time in the SOE, The Secret Ministry of Ag. & Fish: my life in Churchill's school for spies.[7] The title of the book came from the cover she used during the war; because her work was covered by the Official Secrets Act she told family and friends that she worked for the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries.[4] Riols has tried unsuccessfully to be recognised as a war veteran in France, but was told that Britain was not a war zone, and that the SOE was not an operational unit.[6]

Publications[]

Non-fiction[]

  • Eye of the Storm (1983)
  • Abortion: A woman's birth right? (1986)
  • Only the best (1987)
  • When suffering comes (1990)
  • My unknown child: a personal story of abortion (1995)
  • The Secret Ministry of Ag. & Fish: my life in Churchill's school for spies (2014)

Fiction[]

  • Laura (1992)
  • Where hope shines through (1994)
  • Katherine (1994)
  • To live again (1995; republished 2013)
  • Before the dawn (1996; republished 2013)
  • Where love endures (1997; republished 2013)
  • Autumn sonata (2014)

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b "Andrew Lownie Literary Agency :: Authors :: Noreen Riols". Andrew Lownie Literary Agency. Retrieved 19 March 2021.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Rayment, Sean (2014). "The secret life of Noreen Riols: training SOE agents". Tales from the Special Forces Club : the untold stories of Britain's elite WWII warriors. London: William Collins. ISBN 978-0-0074-5254-5 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e "The secret life of an intelligence agent". Dundee Courier. 3 October 1994. p. 7 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "The Spy Who Loved Me". HuffPost UK. 12 February 2018. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b "Noreen's beliefs bring her success". Reading Evening Post. 3 December 1983. p. 3 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b Randall, Colin (16 February 2005). "Britain was not a war zone, French tell SOE woman". The Daily Telegraph.
  7. ^ Riols, Noreen (2014). The secret Ministry of Ag. & Fish: my life in Churchill's school for spies. ISBN 978-1-4472-3702-0. OCLC 972683929.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""