Not my favorite of the series, but still a good read; plus I'd read anything about John Russell and his actress girlfriend/wife Effi and how they are faring both during WW2, and now in this book, the time period directly after.
Europe is in ruins. The Soviets, the Americans, the British and in a somewhat limited capacity, the French, are fighting over what to do, how to do it, who gets what, and what the punishment should be for the Germans. Some cities are absolutely devastated and in ruins; others have fared better. And once again John Russell, a journalist, is torn between loyalties to one nation which helped him and his family during the siege of Berlin, and another which employs him as a double-agent. John has friends, acquaintances, connections - and enemies - at every turn, or so it seems. He can't get a hotel room without wondering if he'll even wake up the next day alive. Is he being bugged? Is the next contact he has a good one, bad one, can be trusted - or not? What the Americans ask him to do - is it safe; can he take it on? Then the Soviets step in with their demands. John's in constant flux, constant peril and that creates its own tension for him - and the reader.
The storyline here is all over the place and it takes a careful read to make sense of it, more so than previous books in the series. Nothing is straightforward; nothing can be taken for granted. In the opening pages of Masaryk Station, two women are brutalized and one is murdered. It isn't for many pages forward that the meaning of what happened becomes clear...so in that sense this one is also a mystery.
Add to that the storylines of people trying to leave countries for safety and refuge elsewhere - in fact, it seems that most of the characters here are trying to flee something. Their past. Their country. Most are carrying around deeply painful and weighted secrets - and well, if that isn't post-war Europe, what is?
As always, the writing is perfection, as Mr. Downing seems to know every street and boulevard, building and trainline all throughout Europe, from Trieste to Vienna, Berlin and beyond. I often marvel at his knowledge of this time period - and the geography! I think my father would have enjoyed these books as he was there - France, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Great Britain and other nations during the war and after.
Anyhow, I digress. I wasn't on the 'edge of my seat' with this one, and sometimes felt the book meandered too much from one plot point to the next, but if a reader has followed John up to this point in Books 1-5, then number six is a necessary read.
Four stars.