I'd just like to point out, that I read this in hardback, not Kindle, there was bizarrely no hardback edition from which I could switch to here on Goodreads! The only editions were Kindle or audio ffs. Sort it out people, please!
Anyway, Rory Clements's 'Evil in High Places', was certainly an improvement on the first Sebastian Wolff novel, 'Munich Wolf'. Sure, there is still some relatively patronising descriptions of the Nazis and their policies, but not a patch on the overly condescending attitude of the first book, which really did seem to treat the reader like they were ten years old, and complete Nazi novices! But here, the author does seem to have dispensed with most of that, and has realised, that most people reading an historical fiction book set in the era of the Nazis, pre WWII Nazis in particular, are probably aware of much of at least the basics of said ideology, and are in fact, quite Nazi literate already.
Since reading the first book, 'Munich Wolf', about a year and a half ago, I've also since read, Philip Kerr's, Bernie Gunther series, and although similar, the latter is by far and away the more superior. So, I was gonna label Sebastian Wolff a 'Poundshop Bernie Gunther', but after seeing the author here, trying a bit harder to treat the reader as an adult, I feel that perhaps it’s being a tad too harsh. A 'sanitized Bernie Gunther' may in fact be more appropriate haha! But hopefully, you get the picture.
The story itself was actually quite good, and extremely plausible, however, if only it hadn't been quite so predictable, it could have been so much better.
It basically centred around SS corruption, during the 1936 Winter Olympics in Garmisch-Partenkirchen. Where SS-Gruppenführer Paul Jena led a renegade group of SS troopers and a handful of local crooks in some private enterprise scheme to fleece and rob Jews of their belongings, under the auspices of avoiding the Reich's extortionate export taxes. Captain of Detectives, Sebastian Wolff certainly had his work cut out, in not only proving this, then getting a conviction against such an all powerful and high ranking SS Officer, but along with several connected murders, including that of famous actor, Elena Lang, who'd been in Bavaria filming her latest movie, was not even allowed to have the crimes acknowledged in public!
Apart from some nonsensical spiel from Seb Wolff about 'the politics of envy', regarding an extremely wealthy and reclusive family he had to interview in connection with his investigation into the initial murder in the chain of events, of SS trooper, Theodor Krieger, all was well in the book on the politics front. Wanting the redistribution of wealth and equality, does not equate to 'jealousy' in any way, shape of form! 'F*ck right off! Ya mad Wolff!'
There was actually a couple of excellent lines, that more than made up for the drivel which Seb had come out with previously. When Herr Wolff had suggested to an elderly Jew whom had been robbed by SS-Gruppenführer Paul Jena and his crew, if she would flee to the Middle East and Palestine? She more or less replied, in no way could she do that, as she was no Zionist! 'On yersel quine!'
And when Ulrike, the mother of Seb's son Jurgen turned up out of the blue, after a sixteen year absence, worried about his son's Hitler Youth membership and his egregiously fanatical Nazi politics in general, Detective Wolff asks her, 'with cold dread’, "Are you a Communist?" To which she gloriously replies,
"Of course I am, as every rational person should be!" Woohoo! And again,
'On yersel quine!' Haha!
I also appreciated the highlighting of Seb’s dilemma at having to arrest Theodor Krieger’s wife, Petra for his murder. After the miserable, torturous life of physical and mental abuse Frau Krieger and her three children had had to suffer under the SS criminal’s tyrannical and cruel rule, could anyone have really blamed her for bringing a premature end to that twisted marriage? However, after the confession of Traudl Schramm, Paul Jena and Theodor Krieger’s lover, that SS-Gruppenführer Paul Jena had ordered the killing of his henchman Krieger, Seb felt confident enough and somewhat relieved to be able to dismiss Petra Krieger’s own, rather misguided confession, and send her on her way, back to the bosom of her family.
So, all in all, although not everything wrong with the first novel has been ironed out completely, it is however, a marked improvement. If the books continue on this trajectory, we should eventually hit upon a belter at some point in the future.