This book, set in late 1932 Weimar Germany, is one scary book. One reason I like dystopias so much is that the horrible people in them are just pretend. But the Nazis who came to power in early 1933 were not pretend, and they committed atrocious crimes. And this close-up look at Berlin just as the brownshirts were taking it over is frightening both for what is described and for what you know will be coming later.
Inspektor-Detektiv Willi Kraus, 35, is a respected Berlin homicide cop who received the Iron Cross for his heroism in World War I, and additionally is a local hero for solving a child-killer crime not long ago. His wife Vicki died two years earlier in a freak accident, and her sister now raises his two young sons, Stefan and Erich.
Now Kraus has two new cases. Washed up in the river on the west side of Berlin near Spandau, the body of a woman has been found with mutilated legs – her fibulae have been surgically removed and replanted in the opposite direction. Kraus also is charged with finding a missing Bulgarian princess. While missing persons are not within his ordinary purview, this situation could cause a diplomatic crisis. Both cases turn out to be connected, however. In fact, a number of women have gone missing over the past nine months, all of whom were thought to be under a hypnotic trance when they abruptly left their homes and took the train out to Spandau, from which they never returned.
What Kraus discovers is a horrific preview of barbarity to come. And yet he, like so many other Jews at that time, still thinks that reason will prevail, and resists the idea of leaving Germany. At one point he muses:
Sylvie was the third person this week who’d told him to get out of Germany. It was getting annoying. His family had been here what, since the time of Charlemagne? Why would anyone think he’d just pack up and run? And yet…he couldn’t keep himself from wondering if he ever really did have to leave…where would he go?”
But increasingly, his ability to do his job is stymied by anti-Semitism. As more and more non-Jews are hypnotized by facism, more and more Jews sleepwalk to their deaths. At the end of the book, you find yourself racing through to see if Kraus will escape in time.
Discussion: For me, there were some problems with the book. The intermittent insertion of German phrases is bizarre – the characters presumably all speak German, not English. It just didn’t make sense. The tropes of hypnotism and sleepwalking are clever but at the same time too obviously trying to convey a message about pre-War Germany. And while I accept that the author messed around with the dates of some historical events for plot reasons (which he explains in the afterward), the addition of dialogue from some of the many historical figures of the era just felt like unnecessary “name-dropping.”
Evaluation: This is a definite page-turner with an interesting premise – a Jewish cop trying to solve a crime in the early days of the Nazis. There is an eclectic, interesting cast of characters, and by the end, you can’t put it down until you know what will happen. Thanks to the review by Barbara at Freedom Acres for drawing my attention to this book!
Rating: 3.5/5
Published by St. Martin’s Press, 2010
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I will be reading this soon and it does sound exciting. I haven’t yet read any kind of mystery set around WWII. I don’t know why authors insert foreign phrases here and there…maybe to show off that they know some?
I read a book recently where historical dates were moved around to better fit the story but it didn’t make a big difference because I hadn’t known the history of that country at all. I wonder if it would bother me at all here. Or maybe I would t notice here either. Definitely sounds like an intriguing premise!
It sounds interesting, but the name dropping and foreign phrase insertion could be bothersome. I’m not sure how the sleepwalking and hypnotism plays out in this one, but the title kind of makes me expect it. Thanks for the honest review.
When you say a book is scary, I believe you.
Interesting premise, but that time period interests me in general.
I’m interested because I love mysteries and I love WWII, but your issues concern me. I’m going to have to think about this one.
I’ve read quite a few books set in other countries where the author drops in foreign phrases or words from time to time and I’ve never figured out why. Even with its faults, this sounds good to me.
Jill, I’m glad you liked this book. It scared me half to death and I still think of it. Things that I know were really happening frighten me. I hope more people will read it now.
I am also intrigued, but the problems that you had with the story keep me from jumping right up and obtaining this one. I think another factor that keeps me in my seat is that I have just been sort of overloaded on WWII literature over the past few years, and it takes something special to really turn my head. Not sure if I will read this one, but it does sound very enticing!
Great review as always, Jill. I’m not sure if it’s for me – I love mysteries but am not as fond of historical settings (although I just read my first Charles Todd/Inspector Rutledge a while back and loved it!).
Interesting! This sounds like a great read. I’m also reading a book in the same time period, about the occupation of Paris under the Nazis. The details of life in the city at that time are really fascinating.
Sounds like a really gripping historical thriller. Almost anything set against that backdrop would ratchet up the tension I think.
oh my, I DO want to know what happens!
although I must say the hypnotism and sleepwalking theme sounds a wee bit heavy handed.
I generally like books about World War II, but this one sounds pretty dark and scary.
Hmmmm….this one has me thinking!! I don’t mind dark and scary and may read it!
This looks like one that would appeal to Jason more than me. I’ll make a note of it since I pick out his audio books
Scary? And based on historic events? I’ll likely take a pass, although I’ll keep it in mind for J – man of steel that he is, he can handle a frightening page-turner better than I!