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240 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1976




"Holy sh*tsnacks! Krieger's one of the boys from Brazil!"Yes, once again I find myself reading a book as a result of an Archer reference (see also Bartleby The Scrivener ). The premise (of the book, not of Archer) is that down in South America, the fugitive Dr. Mengele is sending out six men to kill 94 civil servants on precise dates in nine countries.
["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>After reading and loving A Kiss Before Dying, I've decided to read all of this author's novels, and my second one, The Boys From Brazil did not disappoint. Not having seen the film adaptation, the unusual plot was a complete surprise for me.
The intrigue begins with a top secret meeting in a Japanese restaurant to initiate a killer of a mysterious project by 'the comrade organization'. The important operation assigns six hitmen to dispose of 94 elderly civil servants (along with their secrets) scattered throughout the world, and they must die on the designated dates set forth by the still hunted Angel of Death. (no spoiler here)
The secret turns out to be a pretty darn scary scenario, one that could perhaps really happen in our day and age, but not so back in 1976 (I don't think) when TBFB was first published and Dr. Josef Mengele was still alive.
Despite a couple of confusing character narration switches, another great Levin read for me that I could not put down!
Krieger was raised by a former Nazi scientist who fled with him to Brazil, where they lived until Krieger was 15, when his pet Dobermans killed the man he believed to be his father - this in reference to the book "The Boys From Brazil". It is implied that Malory Archer somehow set these events in motion as he remembers her arranging for him to be brought to ISIS afterwards. Krieger studied and became accomplished in a variety of different sciences including bionics, electronics, neuroscience, chemistry, biotechnology, surgery, and robotics, but, despite this, never earned a formal doctorate degree of any kind which is sometimes evident in his conversations where people ask if he is a doctor.

A mind-bending speculation and a race against time and history! Ira Levin, back in the 70s no less, plays so brilliantly with the nature of evil’s resurgence that the distance from the first to the very last line feels like a black hole, erasing all sense of space and time.
My only regret is that I had actually watched the movie, as I realized almost immediately—and while it was also highly impactful, it spoiled the plot for me... But that’s a minor grievance. What the reader gets is the Nazi hunter Wiesenthal—pardon me, Lieberman—locked in a duel against Dr. Mengele himself, delivered with European depth and the sheer sweep of an American comic book, but one of the unforgettable ones!
Trust this old American Jewish veteran of the film and stage business, and plunge right into the chase! After all, the world and history are at stake, the battle is ruthless and intelligent, and Levin never offers any guarantees.
Levin is, after all, the author of "Rosemary's Baby" as well (which I’ve also watched as a movie... the whole thing... my excuse being that I was still at quite a tender age and had no idea what was about to hit me), a book I will absolutely never, ever read—that one is strictly for extremists.
