“The Berlin Package” begins as the world comes to a full stop. The reader, like the narrator, is riveted to his seat in a Boeing 767: at thirty-nine thousand feet, in the dead of a winter night, the left jet engine has just coughed out beyond the window. It is silent. The tension is immediate. The narrator’s mind hurriedly goes over personal details, the might-have-beens, another flight he almost took but didn’t.
The narrative is visceral. Eyes, ears, all the senses are alert. An original and remarkable feature of the novel is that the narrator, Pero, has a full technical background; he is aware of the exact altitude and flight path, the ambient mechanical sound that has died, the plane now a silent eighty-ton glider. Pero passes a note to the stewardess, then the security marshal, that a basic mistake is being made. They are flying at 39,000 feet but he knows “the old GE turbofans” have an operational ceiling of 36,000 feet, the fate of the plane is hanging in the balance. Pero is allowed into the cabin where the copilot flips feverishly through a 3-ring binder that holds the “SOP” (standard operating procedure) and specifications. Pero tells them: “Restart at 36,000 feet. Don’t dump fuel. Purge first. Use cold start procedure.” This eventually works. First one engine comes to life, then, later, the second.
Peter Riva has fashioned a very effective narration that makes use of all the senses and immediate thoughts, at the same time it is very well-informed about technology and international events. The canvas is very broad. If this is fiction, and a “thriller,” it also points out a number of important truths about international life. Nuclear terrorism, and the great danger posed by nuclear proliferation, is at the forefront of the novel’s action and the radioactive “package” given to the narrator. An East-West confrontation occasionally recalls John LeCarre but it is given a very different twist: German security personnel-- ex-Stasi-- have thoroughly infiltrated cumbersome American institutions like the CIA and FBI as “friends.” The ambitious power-hungry Tisch, actually a serial killer, represents the sinister presence at the highest levels of government of ex-Stasi operatives. In this novel cliches and reverential attitudes from the past, probably dating from the Cold War, are seen skeptically, or are completely shattered. A number of actions by American organizations are botched. (Mistakes that are part of a long series stretching into the past. They anticipate recent actions by the FBI’s James Comey tilting the important 2016 US presidential election.)
A visit to CERN in Switzerland and an inquiry into the theft of radioactive uranium is described with impressive knowledge. It is also a source of cliff-hanging suspense. There are some very warm portraits of interesting people in the novel, for example the African Mbuno; Pero met him while filming in Kenya, a reminder that “The Berlin Package” is one of a series of books that began with a film project in Africa. Some of the characters in “The Berlin Package” were present in the earlier book.