Bernie Gunther is sent to Smolensk, in Nazi-occupied Russia, to
investigate possible war crimes that involve the assassination of thousands of
Polish officers in Katyn Wood by Russian operatives. Ironic that the Nazi regime would want to
investigate war crimes, but the thought is that it will give them leverage
against the Soviets when they reveal this heinous act on an international
stage. During the course of the
investigation Bernie stumbles into other murders and intrigues and unmasks a
double-agent in the process. There are
so many nuances and subplots in this complex novel, it really provides an excellent
lens into the true history during a most complex moment in the second world war.
A woman viciously murders her seemingly doting husband. We meet up with her several years later in a mental facility, where a therapist tries to get her to speak and to reveal her story. Who is innocent and who is the victim? The answer isn’t straightforward. The resolution to the novel features a real twist that will have the reader questioning the chronology of the different narrative threads in the book. A real page-turner.

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