The Collaborator was written by Australian author, Diane Armstrong, a Holocaust survivor who arrived here in 1948 aged seven, and is one of the best fictional accounts I've read about this egregious period in recent history.
The rabid doctrines of Hitler's Nazis were enforced under German administration in collaborating countries, with Hungary the exception, self-governing until 1944. The Horthy government took a far less doctrinaire approach and although there were Hungarian Jews transported to concentration camps, they were relatively few in number. In fact, Hungarian authorities allowed themselves consistently to be bribed, at great personal risk, to allow Polish, Ukrainian and Slovakian refugees to enter their country.
By 1944, with the war's outcome inevitable, the Hungarians started secret negotiations with the Allies. At that time, the Germans overran Hungary, sacking the government, and began increased transportation of Jews.
Two of the Germans in charge of transportation were SS Colonels Adolf Eichmann and Kurt Becher. In the book, negotiations take place between a Hungarian Jew, Miklos Nagy and Eichmann, for the German to be provided trucks from the Allies in exchange for a train load of Jews. Nagy can never trust the German. Then Eichmann, as we know, was transferred elsewhere to control the final solution, while the more affable Becher took over in Hungary.
The story centres around investigative journalist Annika Barnett, late 30s, who gives up her editorial position in Sydney. Unsettled, especially on the basis of her family background (her grandmother had survived the holocaust when shipped to Switzerland on a train negotiated by Nagy), and with neither her grandmother nor her mother wanting to discuss the matter, she decides to head off to Hungary and Israel to find out what she can for her own understanding.
In an intriguing plot based on actual events (albeit the name of the main protagonist has been changed), we read of the fraught days of life as a Jew in wartime Hungary, post-war emigration to Palestine, establishment of a new nation, Israel, its problems from within and without, including Israelis killing Israelis (the sinking of the arms ship Altalena is detailed). Essential to the story is a 1950s court case in which Miklos Nagy is charged as a Nazi collaborator. It is the only crime in Israel punishable by death.
This is a journey that will keep the reader involved, especially through Armstrong's writing. For example, on her first visit, we find Annika "...gazing at the fabled panorama of Jerusalem. The luminous limestone of buildings spread out below them glows in the afternoon light..."
Oh, and there is a love interest, but better I allow you to find that out on reading this superb work.
Brilliant! My book of the year.