by Barbara Kelley
The Canceled Czech is Book #2 of the Evan Tanner series by Lawrence Block. This book was originally published in 1966 by Fawcett Publications, 25 years after World War II. The e-book edition was published on October 13, 2009 by Harper Collins Publications. Please keep this in mind while reading that the events in this book occurred during the 1940s through the 1960s.
For 16 years, Evan Tanner has been unable to sleep due to shrapnel received in his brain during the Korean War - it is in the part of the brain that gives a person the ability to know when it is time to go to sleep; therefore, rendering him unable to sleep. This problem can be a beneficial asset: not being able to sleep means he has more time to do other things, like forging college term papers for high-paying students; learning multiple languages fluently; and spying? This book is 200 pages of almost nonstop action, some of it extremely funny, and at other times downright tragic.
One of the characters is Greta, a twenty-year-old German Nazi sympathizer and a total nymphomaniac. I have read about nymphomaniacs before, but Greta, in my opinion, breaks the mold. She is a blonde-haired, blue-eyed version of the "Birth of Venus" painting, but even more beautiful. She can and does have any man she wants, and there is one scene in the book that had me laughing so hard my ribs and stomach hurt: when she and Evan, along with four Jews were trying to break the bad old Nazi out of a Slavic prison. When you read that part, you will probably laugh, too. Even Evan, our hero, didn't want to leave her behind, but his mission was more important.
Evan's mission is to kidnap an old Nazi known as "the Butcher". Evan hates Nazis, but he will complete his mission because the U. S. government needs the papers and information the old man has before either the Russians or the Nazis get it. The old Nazi has diabetes and a catalytic disorder (catalepsy is a disorder that is much like narcolepsy, rendering a person so unconscious that they seem dead - their breathing is so low that a doctor can sometimes not register a pulse or heartbeat with a stethoscope). There are several scenes where the old man goes into a cataleptic seizure and Evan uses these moments to save his life until he can get those papers. Some of these scenes are very funny. The Jews want to kill him, but when he goes into a seizure, and they think he is dead, Evan saves the Nazi from being hanged, which surely would have killed him; however, the Jews circumsize the old geezer, and when he comes out of the seizure the old guy is horrified at what was done to him. There were times when the old man was awake and spouting off his filthy mouth and I wanted to, and I wanted to reach through the pages of my Kindle and strangle him myself. I am a gentle person who has never harmed anybody in my entire life. However, I felt angry every time he spoke his racist comments. I think Evan felt that way, as well.
Once again, Evan's being a member of just about every lost cause around the world helped him get the old Nazi through several Serbian and Croatian countries, as well as Greece, Turkey, Portugal, and Macedonia. I will read the third book in this series as soon as I read a few other books on my reading list. I gave this book 5 stars.