I bought the book cheap in a library sale.
I found it readable though I didn’t really know what was happening or who the various characters were. It was hard to make sense of the book.
The first part, at least, takes place in Belorussia or Bela Rus, though Australia was somehow involved.
Then we got to a section ostensibly written by Radislaw Kabbel, about the history of the Kabbelski family.There are also extracts from the journals of Stanislaw Kabbelski, Chief of Police. He may have been Radislaw’s father. What is described takes place in the early 1940s, that is, during the Second World War.
At one point I realized it dealt with a family with Fascist sympathies, This is the first book I’ve read portraying Fascists as normal people with normal feelings, who loved their children (though they hated and did away with Jews).
One of the main characters in this section is Oberführer Ganz, referred to as Onkel Willi, apparently, a pedophile, who is portrayed as a very kind and loving man.
The Germans described generally disposed of people, for instance Jews, by blowing them up. Onkel Willi is the character I most bonded with, by being such a wonderful man that everyone loved, though he too eventually has the same fate
The story is told from the viewpoint of Radislaw Kabbel as a little boy. He has a sister called Genia.
I found the book confused and confusing, since I prefer to be told directly who is who and to not have to work everything out myself, which is not my forte.
One of the main characters, Delaney, is a detective, who plays some sort of football; descriptions of the various games were boring and incomprehensible to me.
The latter part of the book apparently takes place in Australia.
We hear about Danielle and Galina, whoever they are, and whomever they are married to.
To sum up, for some strange reason I found the book eminently readable though exceedingly convoluted and thus incomprehensible. I can’t recommend it: read it at your peril.
However, I may well read Schindler���s Ark by the same author since I saw the film and greatly appreciated it.
My apologies if I have written anything that is incorrect. The book could well have done with a family tree, or explanation of who is who.