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Blood Winter

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A British spy and an American surgeon operating undercover in World War II Berlin find their loyalties challenged by a beautiful but mysterious researcher at the suspicious Institute for Infectious Diseases

Paperback

First published May 22, 1990

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William Patrick

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Gram.
542 reviews51 followers
May 2, 2015
A sophisticated & highly atmospheric World War I tale of a spying mission in Berlin during the winter of 1916/1917. The hero is an American doctor, Eli Gordon, recruited by the British to the cause of the Allies. His mission is to discover what the German military is planning by way of advances in bacteriological warfare, but all is not as it seems. In the realms of skulduggery, the Allies are just as bad with their highly secretive studies in chemical warfare which began in March 1916 at Porton Down. While in Germany, Eli meets Dr. Margarethe Riesling who is working at the Institute for Infectious diseases in Berlin. The two become romantically involved and try to escape to Holland - pursued by Schiller, a German criminal detective along with a major from the German Intelligence service AND the Kaiser's personal dentist who was a former lover of Margarethe Riesling and has his own reasons for wanting to track her down. It's a fast paced and intelligent spy thriller - although much of it is based on fact - and if you can track down a copy, it's well worth a read.
Profile Image for Carlos Mock.
959 reviews14 followers
March 24, 2016
Blood Winter by William Patrick

The year is 1917. WWI is on its third year. The British blockade of Germany has the country almost starved. The Germans have consumed their canine and feline populations and have started butchering people as a source of meat. ("Soilent Green is people").

In the middle of this chaos, there's British intelligence that suggest that Germany is planning a last ditch effort: Operation Alberich. The British suspect this to be a chemical warfare - simply because they are thinking the same. The British have developed a weapon capable of delivering anthrax to the battlefield but they are afraid to use it because they don't have an antidote.

Enter Eli Gordon, a Harvard graduate physician who is helping at the surgical hospitals in France. Because he's an American, and the US has yet to enter the war, he's recruited by the British to investigate the German chemical arsenal, and whether the German possess a "magical bullet" to combat the anthrax.

Gordon's venture in Berlin leads him to Dr. Margarethe Riesling, a University of Michigan graduate that is currently working on the biochemical warfare department at the Institute for Infectious diseases in Berlin.

Dr. Riesling is the only person who can prove to the British that the Germans do not possess a chemical arsenal, but she is in line to discover penicillin - the "magical bullet" given to the world by Alexander Fleming in 1928.

Ultimately, Riesling and Gordon, bound first by necessity but then by passion, must survive a deadly chase across Germany into Holland to prevent the greatest military atrocity the world has ever known.

They are chased by Andreas Schiller, a German criminal detective investigating the death of Colonel Kraft von Stade, Riesling's lover who was killed by her. They must also evade major Walther Ostriker, the Under Director of the Center of German intelligence - who is trying to prevent that "magical bullet" to get into British hands, and finally by Dr. Eskne Fist - the Kaiser's personal dentist and leader of the German black market in the war - who was Riesling's lover long time ago - and who's determined to get her at any cost.

A historical fiction narrated from the third person point of view by many of the characters, I thought it was not well written. The author keeps changing points of view constantly from one character to another - sometimes even to minor characters who serve no purpose on the plot. It was confusing to read and tedious to follow. I would have narrowed the point of view only to the main characters and perhaps it would have been an easier and more enjoyable read.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews