Reviewed by ibeforem on

4 of 5 stars

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I was quite pleased with this book. Professor Stachelmann is not your usual leading man. He’s not a heartthrob, he doesn’t have his act together, he’s not powerful, heck, he’s not even particularly healthy. But like many of the characters in this book, he feels real. I like how von Ditfurth writes the relationships between his characters. The initial meeting between Stachelmann and his old friend, Ossi, is just as awkward and uncomfortable as you’d expect. Stachelmann and Anne’s flirty interactions run hot and cold as Stachelmann deals with his insecurities and indecision about her, but they always feel natural. He’s not a smooth operator, nor does he pretend to be.

Behind it all, Stachelmann is a historian, and he’s driven by the search for the truth. He’s not trying to figure out who’s behind the murders for the sake of the father/husband, but because as details come to light, it’s a mystery he can’t help but try to solve. At the end, the mystery isn’t so much about who, but about why. As things come to a conclusion, you discover that in Germany, some wounds may never heal. This is the first book I’ve read in a long time that didn’t deal with Nazis in an overdone, cliche way. The German perspective really added something new for me.

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  • Started reading
  • 3 September, 2008: Finished reading
  • 3 September, 2008: Reviewed