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Luke McCallin

Autor(a) de The Man from Berlin

6 Works 444 Membros 30 Críticas

Séries

Obras por Luke McCallin

The Man from Berlin (2013) 221 exemplares
The Pale House (2014) 119 exemplares
The Ashes of Berlin (2015) 77 exemplares
Conspiration (2023) 1 exemplar

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Membros

Críticas

My favourite Kripo detectives alumni list:
1. Bernie Gunther (by Philip Kerr) *****
2. Xavier Marsch (in Fatherland by Robert Harris) ****
3. Richard Oppenheimer (by Harald Gilbers) ****
4. Gereon Rathh (by Völker Kutscher) ****
5. Gregor Reinhardt (by Luke McCallin) ***

still to be rated :
?. Hans Kalterer (by Birkefeld & Hachmeister)
 
Assinalado
otori | 14 outras críticas | Jan 23, 2024 |
As summer parches the despoiled earth of northwestern France in 1918, young Lieutenant Gregor Reinhardt, Seventeenth Prussian Fusiliers, has fought both east and west. A blooded warrior who commands a company of men older than himself, he senses the cause is lost but fights hard because that’s what he must do, and because he’s loyal to his comrades.

Consequently, when a booby-trap explodes at a divisional staff meeting behind the lines, killing several senior officers, and a soldier he recommended for a battlefield commission is blamed for the deaths and quickly executed, Reinhardt can’t sit with this. Receiving tacit permission to investigate from a sympathetic colonel — not that he would have twiddled his thumbs otherwise — the nineteen-year-old lieutenant begins to ask questions.

No sooner has he done so than he falls into a rabbit hole of conspiracy and murder, with blood having blood to eliminate witnesses; sometimes, he’s the target. After all, he served on the Eastern Front, where he came in contact with Russian soldiers infected by defeatist, socialist ideals, and the protégé executed for the booby-trap explosion was known to be insubordinate, radical, and a malcontent. So Reinhardt’s the perfect fall guy.

Participants in the conspiracy, whose goal and breadth he can’t penetrate at first, appear to include very senior commanders, deserters, Bolsheviks, doctors treating shell-shocked soldiers, dissenters, and, pervading all, the frustration and anger at a war that continues to chew up and spit out lives, though there can be no hope of German victory. The narrative therefore makes an unusual coming-of-age story of a young man trying to live morally where few, if any, morals exist. You may also read the novel as a labyrinthine thriller or mystery, with qualities of each, which will keep you guessing until the last page. But from whatever standpoint you approach it, From a Dark Horizon is first-rate First World War fiction.

Start with Reinhardt, who, despite his experience and responsibility, is still just an adolescent, truculent and earnest, occasionally pompous when he spouts principles, a character whose actions don’t always match his good intentions. Human, in other words. Most others around him have their facets too; I particularly like his sergeant, fiercely loyal but also brutally honest, and a mercurial captain who seems wildly unpredictable and who Reinhardt thinks is on his side but can’t be sure.

McCallin also displays an impressive command of the battlefield, rest area, home front, chain of command, you name it. No detail escapes his eye, and everything feels authentic, something rare in First World War novels. The author, who follows the history faithfully, re-creates the mood of both army and home front. He conveys the weariness for sacrifice that seems to have no purpose, the grumblings of revolution, and the political maneuvering to cast blame once the war finally ends. I admire this panorama very much, both for its historical grasp and adept fictional portrayal.

I like the thriller/mystery aspect as well, though several twists toward the end feel rather convenient, with fortuitous arrivals of powerful characters. One such character in particular, who seems to slide in and out of his ability to process what’s happening around him, is too helpful to the story as well. Even so, reversals come frequently, for whenever Reinhardt discovers the next link in the chain of conspiracy, that person typically winds up dead.

Enough bodies fall (more from foul play than combat) to staff a platoon, and the Byzantine links among them necessitate frequent recapitulations, usually in the form of Reinhardt explaining what he’s learned, and how. From a Dark Horizon, though its pages turn rapidly, can be talky at times.

This volume marks the last in the wartime series about Reinhardt’s exploits. But in his afterword, McCallin promises that his hero will have further adventures in the 1920s. I’m ready.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Novelhistorian | Jan 24, 2023 |
My thanks to the Author publisher's and NetGalley for providing me with a Kindle version of this book to read and honestly review.
Well written and researched this is the fourth book in the excellent 'Gregor Reinhardt series, but if you have not read any of the previous books WHY NOT, however don't let it stop you reading this book, as the Author has cleverly gone back in time, and our hero is a young Lieutenant on the Western Front in 1918. Atmospheric clever descriptive with a real feel for the time and place and the horrors of trench warfare. There are a sometimes bewildering number of characters, especially if your memory isn't what it was, but this provides numerous suspects, and or victims as our hero investigates a series of murders. A engaging gripping story with plenty of mystery and surprise twists along the way.
Completely recommended.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Gudasnu | Feb 28, 2022 |
Gregor Rhinehardt is a Captain in the Abwher during WWII. He served in WWI and also as a policeman in Berlin, but left when he could no longer stomach the Nazi police tactics. While serving in Sarajevo, he is tasked with investigating the murder of another Abwher member, Handel, and a photo journalist, Marija Vukic. Someone does not want him to succeed.
 
Assinalado
baughga | 14 outras críticas | Jan 30, 2022 |

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Nicolas Zeimet Translator

Estatísticas

Obras
6
Membros
444
Popularidade
#55,179
Avaliação
3.8
Críticas
30
ISBN
61
Línguas
2

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