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1940

A compelling read on many levels, offering personal reflection, historical speculation and mystery.

A novel set on the eve of World War II, focusing on Dr. Eduard Bloch, an Austrian physician who treated Adolf Hitler as a young man and who had been the attending physician when Hitler’s mother was dying of breast cancer.

Neugeboren (Big Man, 2001, etc.) uses Bloch, an actual historical figure for whom Hitler had personally made arrangements to emigrate to the United States, to explore themes of racial purity, mysterious disappearance and psychological disturbance. Bloch’s life becomes entangled with that of Elisabeth Rofman, a medical illustrator who travels from Baltimore to New York City in search of her father, who has recently disappeared from his apartment in the Bronx. Elisabeth’s anxieties increase when she discovers that her mentally disturbed son Daniel has escaped from an institution in Baltimore. Complicating the action are the ministrations of Elisabeth’s former husband, a smooth and manipulative operator (pun intended—he’s a surgeon) who also wants to find Daniel, primarily to have him returned to the institution to undergo medical castration in an attempt to rein in his primal urges. Neugeboren mixes a third-person account of Elisabeth’s search for her husband and son (and antipathy for her ex-husband) with accounts from Bloch’s journal, in which he traces his growing romantic interest in Elisabeth and offers memories of the young Hitler and speculation on his rise to power. Bloch also dispassionately reviews his life and his status as an Edeljude, a “noble Jew,” who raises an interesting and ultimately unanswerable question: “In accepting favors granted to me by Adolf Hitler that were, to my knowledge, granted to no other Jew, have I been dishonorable?” While Bloch is too serene to be described as tormented by this question, it casts a shadow over his actions in 1940—both the year and the novel.

A compelling read on many levels, offering personal reflection, historical speculation and mystery.

Pub Date: April 1, 2008

ISBN: 978-0-9763895-6-9

Page Count: 274

Publisher: Two Dollar Radio

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2008

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THE SECRET GUESTS

When you’re done binge-watching The Crown, pick up this multifaceted wartime thriller.

During German bombing raids on London during World War II, the young princesses Elizabeth and Margaret are secreted away to Ireland for protection.

Clonmillis Hall has seen better days. A large estate in rural Ireland belonging to the Duke of Edenmore, Clonmillis, by virtue of Ireland’s neutrality in the war, feels a world away from the bombs raining down on England. But during a secret meeting in Dublin, arrangements are made: King George’s two young daughters need to be kept safe during the Blitz, and remote Ireland seems the perfect place. The result is a series of domestic and professional frictions of nationality, class, religion, and gender. There is Dick Lascelles, the louche, charismatic diplomat in charge of the arrangements. Detective Garda Strafford, whose Anglo-Irish background sets him somewhat apart from his countrymen, oversees the estate’s security. Special Agent Celia Nashe, posing as a governess, is caught between her professional duties and being a surrogate caretaker to the serious elder princess, code-named “Ellen,” and the fiery younger girl, “Mary.” There is the irascible Duke and his household staff, who have varying levels of knowledge of the plot, and then there are those outside the estate who would seek to undermine the safety of everyone on it. Black (the pen name of Booker Prize–winning novelist John Banville) continues his storied career in the same vein as his most recent novel, Wolf on a String (2017), a historical mystery set in Prague, though his return here to his native Ireland is a welcome one. As ever, Black’s gifts of rich description and deft characterization are on display, and if the first half of the novel is more leisurely than a typical political thriller, its second half positively gallops.

When you’re done binge-watching The Crown, pick up this multifaceted wartime thriller.

Pub Date: Jan. 14, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-250-13301-4

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Henry Holt

Review Posted Online: Sept. 29, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2019

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TANGERINE

A vivid setting and a devious, deadly plot, though the first is a bit overdone and the second contains a few...

In 1956, a pair of college roommates meets again in Tangier, with terrifying results.

“At first, I had told myself that Tangier wouldn’t be so terrible,” says Alice Shipley, a young wife dragged there by her unpleasant husband, John McAllister, who has married her for her money. He vanishes every day into the city, which he adores, while Alice is afraid to go out at all, having once gotten lost in the flea market. Then Lucy Mason, her one-time best friend and roommate at Bennington College, shows up unannounced on her doorstep. “I had never, not once in the many moments that had occurred between the Green Mountains of Vermont and the dusty alleyways of Morocco, expected to see her again.” Alice and Lucy did not part on good terms; there are repeated references to a horrible accident which will remain mysterious for some time. What is clear is that Lucy is romantically obsessed with Alice and that Alice is afraid of her. In chapters that alternate between the two women’s points of view, the past and the present unfold. The two young women bonded quickly at Bennington: though Alice is a wealthy, delicate Brit and Lucy a rough-edged local on scholarship, both are orphans. Or at least Lucy says she is—from the start, there are inconsistencies in her story that put Alice in doubt. And while Alice is so frightened of Tangier that she can’t leave the house, Lucy feels right at home: she finds the maze of souks electrifying, and she quickly learns to enjoy the local custom of drinking scalding hot mint tea in the heat. She makes a friend, a shady local named Joseph, and immediately begins lying to him, introducing herself as Alice Shipley. Something evil this way comes, for sure. Mangan’s debut pays homage to The Talented Mr. Ripley and to the work of Daphne du Maurier and Shirley Jackson.

A vivid setting and a devious, deadly plot, though the first is a bit overdone and the second contains a few head-scratchers, including the evil-lesbian trope. Film rights have already been sold; it will make a good movie.

Pub Date: March 27, 2018

ISBN: 978-0-06-268666-4

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Ecco/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Dec. 23, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2018

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