This weeks book is a historical spy/mystery/ thriller but mostly it's a work of fiction and as such should be judged mostly on it's entertainment value. I received Dan Fesperman's The Arms Maker of Berlin right before dinner on Thursday and started to read it after dinner. Before I turned out the lights that night I had read over a third of it and had a hard time putting it down.
When Nat Turnbull, a history professor who specializes in the German resistance, gets the news that his estranged mentor, Gordon Wolfe, has been arrested for possession of stolen World War II archives, he's hardly surprised that,even at the age of eighty-four, Gordon has gotten himself in trouble. But what's in the archives is staggering: a spymaster's trove missing since the end of the war, one that Gordon has always claimed is full of "secrets you can't find anywhere else . . . live ammunition."
Yet key documents are still missing, and Nat believes Gordon has hidden them. The FBI agrees, and when Gordon is found dead in jail, the Bureau dispatches Nat to track down the material, which has also piqued the interest of several dangerous competitors. As he follows a trail of cryptic clues left behind by Gordon, assisted by an attractive academic with questionable motives, Nat's quest takes him to Bern and Berlin, where his path soon crosses that of Kurt Bauer, an aging German arms merchant still hoarding his own wartime secrets. As their stories and Gordon's-intersect across half a century, long-buried exploits of deceit, devotion, and doomed resistance begin working their way to the surface. And as the stakes rise, so do the risks . . .
< Cue The Spooky Theme Music from The Twilight Zone >
ReplyDeleteWeird !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I am readng this very same book RIGHT NOW also !!!!
Picked it up thursday at the library and have had to force myself NOT to finish it in one sitting.
LOLOLOLOLOL
a previous work by same author that i can recommend is The Prisoner of Guantanamo - very good.
In the book the Dulles character in Bern Switzerland is Allan W. Dulles and not his older brother and former Secretary of State John Foster Dulles as you stated in your review. My take on the book was a good summer read that needed some tightening up.
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