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If you are sick of reading poorly-written cheap detective novels and are looking for something different, give this one a try. I have already added his next two books to my wish list.What I enjoyed most about this book is that it gave me a good sense of what it was like to live in Germany in the period immediately preceeding WWII. I respectfully disagree. Hey, you can't go wrong for [.]. Downing is an excellent writer who knows how to use words and language to maintain the reader's interest and convey the story. Many other reviewers have provided a good synopsis of the book so I'll skip that.
Others have called the author an Alan Furst wannabe. If you like history and historical novels, I think you will enjoy this book. To put it simply, this was a very enjoyable read. The bottom line is that if you like Furst, you'll like Downing. bucks. It's the kind of book you can sit and read for several hours at a time without ever getting tired of it.
Although Downing writes in the Furst style, and many comparisons can be made, he has developed his own voice.
It had more plot than the average Furst book, which sometimes takes a while to get going, and the period details and character motivations and descriptions were well thought out. Also, as a German speaker I found some curious misspellings of German words.
Any copy editor should have caught that. German nouns in lower case.
As a big fan of Le Carre, Greene, Alan Furst, and others in the genre, I looked forward to reading this one. He has good reasons for this, and when he finally does it's almost too late, of course, but the many sub plots and competing themes threatened to be too much at times.
All in all, it had just enough compelling story and characters to make me try another in the series. It got the job done, but didn't stand out for me.
That said, the main character seemed to take hold of his situation less than I wanted him to.
There is great insight, thoughtfulness, and tension in this novel and it succeeds in bringing its characters to life. One reviewer here described this as a "quiet thriller" and that is quite apt. I look forward to reading more of Downing's work and recommend this book to anyone interested in pre-WWII Nazi Germany and Europe. Very well written thriller that does a good job of creating the atmosphere and enviornment of pre-war Nazi Germany. Downing's style is similar to that of Alan Furst and fans of those novels should be pleased with this.
a hard bitten cop [Phillip Kerr]. It is a pleasant change to encounter a main lead who is not 1. First, if you think that 'nothing happens' after finishing this, then you have been watching the Bourne Trilogy too much. Russell is a journalist, a father and somewhat of a marginal man with multiple nationalities. There are though beatings, there is espionage, there is even a fair amount of sex. Mr.
A couple of things to engage with other reviews. a spy by profession [Alan Furst] or 2. Downing is to be congratulated on creating a seamless world in which his characters do what they can to get through the day while the universe seems to be going progressively out of kilter. If the sense of anxiety and decay doesn't get under your fingernails, then you are robotic.Second, the characters are meaningful and interestingly complex. As such, I'd say he is an original character and I'm looking forward to seeing where his efforts to stay alive take him. As someone who has studied Berlin between 1933-45, I appreciated the manner in which he has taken the ideologies that we think we know and translated them in to a narrative of everyday shortage, minor terrors and moral lapses.
There are no explosions and of course no fancy digital technologies.
Of course, he must save himself from his situation. The main character, John Russell, is drawn in to a web of espionage involving the Germans, British, and Russians. This is a solid story, with a satisfying ending that suggests more good work may be coming from this author.Steve Wiggins, author of "Streets of Warsaw."Streets of Warsaw: A Novel of the Polish Resistance in World War II This is a spy story more than a war story, so it's not as knock-out exciting as some Nazi novels. Fortunately, it is more grounded in reality, which for me is a strong point.
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