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Audible Audio
First published July 14, 2015
"Einstein … was supposed to have said, that he didn't know what the weapons of World War III would be like, but that he did know … [they would fight World War IV with rocks]."I loved the tone Turtledove set in this. I knew I was reading this on a Kindle, but it felt as though I were reading a 1950s paperback with those fragile yellowy pages and the smell of an old book, all through the words and the burbly 1950s setting he created back in the U.S. Turtledove has the language, the culture, the fashion, and the mores down pat. It's a lovely complement to his switching back and forth between the cozy domestic homelife of Americans with Vasili's struggles in Manchuria, Daisy's worries in Fakenham, Ihor's inner thoughts in the Ukraine, and those of the soldiers and families in Germany.
"Nice of the Russians to give us the chance to die for their country."There's a complexity to Bombs Away, a fearsomeness. Those Germans in the American Zone are thrilled to be there as opposed to being in the Russian one, but it doesn't mean they like the Amis, the Americans. The fighting Russians also remember how the German army treated its people during World War II, and it adds an extra impetus now as they battle their way across Germany. But as much as they hate the Germans, they hate their own government as well, for they well understand how awful Stalin is. It did crack me up "listening" to the Russian soldiers and their allies re-interpret the slogans they have to spout.
"What were innocent children doing playing in a park in the middle of a nighttime air raid?"As for the fear, this whole story is too possible. It feels so real! Cade's escape across Korea, the soldiers' reactions and fears on all fronts, Vasili's problems in Harbin. But what's bad is how Turtledove leaves us, desperate to find out what's left.
"He would have to keep turning the pages of his life to discover [the answer]."