Saturday, February 5, 2011

City of Shadows

City of Shadows by Ariana Franklin

The one aspect of this novel I really enjoyed was how Franklin recreated the environment, the mood or atmosphere of post World War I Germany. The German government is in crisis, inflation is staggering, anti-Semitism is rife, citizens are starving and Hitler has begun his rise to power. With the resurgence of fanatical groups in this country and others over the past decade, I have often wondered how a person like Adolph Hitler could possibly have come to power. How could an educated German populace buy into and allow a fanatic such as Hitler to gain power? Franklin does a tremendous job of using her major characters to reveal how citizens of Berlin were thinking and feeling in regards to the political and economic situation in Berlin. There are some scenes in her novel that are riveting and ominous at the same time. Such as when one burned out police detective, sitting in the back corner of a cafe' near police headquarters, warns the main character Inspector Schmidt of the insidious nature of the Nazi party. Using extensive research, Franklin evokes the hectic, Cabaret mood of 1920s Berlin and the growing appeal to the Germans of Hitler's brand of aggressive nationalism. You come away with a greater understanding of how someone like Hitler, in the wake of the hyper-inflation and shame arising from defeat in World War I, was able to gain control and convince the German people that he had the answers. Frightening and Chilling!

With that as a backdrop, Franklin intricately weaves a murder mystery and a hunt for a serial killer with the Nazi's rise to power. Kirkus sums up the plot with these two questions, Could one of the Czar's daughters have survived the massacre of the Russian royal family at Ekaterinburg? And who is the hulking murderer slaughtering women in the German capital? I will admit that the initial plot using the "possible existence" of Anastasia, daughter of the last Czar, at first almost turned me away from this historical thriller by Franklin. But in the end there is a lot to enjoy in this well researched, atmospheric novel.

NOTE: I have posted previous reviews of the author's Mistress of the Art of Death. You can read about those Ariana Franklin novels by clicking on the May 2010 postings.

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