Philip Kerr's 'Bernie Gunther thrillers' are much more than mere page turners. His absorbing 'Berlin Noir' novels are thoroughly researched and have as much historically authenticity as maybe, and 'Field Grey' is a revelation in its way of tackling the complex period at the end of World War Two, with avenging armies of the different partisan groups, and retreating German forces, and Soviet invading armies in hot pursuit, coalescing, in a maelstrom of vicious and horrific destruction and violence. He reveals much about the protagonists on the ground implementing the ambitions of the Great Powers, and shows the human cost of this convoluted post-war period, and its duplicitous practises, that eventually saw the four power division of Berlin, and the development of obtuse and contradictory strategies of the Cold War.
As a retired History Teacher, I only wish that I might have had enjoyed the good fortune of having this book to hand, in explaining the role Berlin played in the breakdown of the old alliances, and the idealism of some and the cynicism of the many, as relations between the victorious powers broke down and rapprochement was replaced by hostility, as the city eventually saw its permanent division.
Bernie Gunther, himself, is a complex but likeable character. A career policeman of the Berlin Old School, Gunther's hard-bitten cynicism, born from the school of hard knocks and bitter experience, allows him to be his own man despite the competing claims of the various group - Nazis, Communists, American CIA, and even the French Secret Service-for his assistance. He realises he is being played by them all, yet somehow manages to maintain a sense of independence and jocular manner, in his own fight for justice and survival. A great read.