"On the second day, at one of the slave labor camps, a skeleton took his hand and kissed it, then held on to it, an obscene gratitude, gibbering something in Slavic—Polish? Russian?—and Jake froze, trying not to smell, feeling his hand buckle under the weight of the fierce grip. “I’m not a soldier,” he said, wanting to run but unable to take his hand away, ashamed, caught now too. The story they’d all missed, the hand you couldn’t shake off."
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"Let’s not make fun of the Russians. We have to get along with them. You know. They’re touchy bastards.”
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“You are about to see something interesting— a cigarette in Berlin actually being smoked. It’s another joke. One sells to another, and another, but who smokes them?”
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"Jobs for Nazis.” “Well, that depends what kind of stink comes off the record. Nobody’s finding work for Goering. But most of them, you know, just kept their heads down. Nominal Nazis. What the hell, it was a Nazi country. And the thing is, they’re good—that’s the kicker. Best in the world. You talk to the tech boys, their eyes get all dreamy just thinking about them. Like they’re talking about pussy. German science.” He shook his head, taking another drink. “It’s a helluva country when you think about it. No resources. They did it all in laboratories. Rubber. Fuel. The only thing they had was coal, and look what they did.”
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Post-war historical thriller, set in WWII ravaged Berlin, exploring what it means to be a good German after the committed atrocities. The main character, Jake Geismar is no soldier, he's with the press, hunting for a good story reflecting allied occupation. He's also searching for the mistress he has left behind before the war. Amid the millions of past murders, Jake stumbles upon the body of an American soldier he traveled with. He starts to dig in this direction too and at one point the two searches converge and illuminate the corruption behind it all. Then it's time for fighting for survival and avoiding getting shot.
It was an entertaining and informative read. The image of Berlin as the site of devastation and the general postwar mood has been well-captured. There's plenty of history, love, mystery. The love angle didn't seem clichéd and added a different sort of excitement to the story. The historical side: after the war, the Russians took all the equipment and technology they could lay their hands on, while the Americans cleverly tracked down the scientists involved. People who used to be Nazis, were being punished. But who could afford not to be a Nazi? But did anything justify such actions, even war? This is the morality question and nothing is black or white. Delve deep into the world of words like persilschein, greifer and denazification. I haven't before heard of these terms and it was fascinating to learn, filling in blanks.
There's lots of dialogue too, some chapters seem made up of mostly that but the chapters are very long. Long enough not to finish in one sitting, which I didn't much like, especially as they could have been split easily. The main characters are well-developed, but the secondary ones are quite numerous and harder to keep in mind. Plus the plot is at times convoluted, you should stay focused if you don't want to end up confused at times (like me). There's a movie too, that I might have seen a long time ago, but it's probably not as good.