Prussian Blue: A Bernie Gunther Novel
Philip Kerr. Putnam, $27 (544p) ISBN 978-0-399-17705-7
Edgar-finalist Kerr’s stunning 12th Bernie Gunther novel (after 2016’s The Other Side of Silence) races along on two parallel tracks. In the first, set in 1956, Bernie, who’s been working as a hotel concierge in Cannes, flees France because he bailed out of performing a hit for Stasi chief Erich Mielke, killing a Stasi agent in the process. The hazardous journey takes him by train, bicycle, and foot toward West Germany. In the main narrative, set in April 1939, SS Gen. Reinhard Heydrich, Bernie’s boss, orders him to Berchtesgaden, Hitler’s mountain retreat. A sniper has fatally shot Karl Flex, a civil engineer in Martin Bormann’s employ, on the deck of Hitler’s villa, the Berghof. Bernie has mere days to solve the crime before Hitler returns to Berchtesgaden to celebrate his 50th birthday. Trying to identify Flex’s killer and bring him to justice proves to be the least of Bernie’s worries. Kerr once again brilliantly uses a whodunit to bring to horrifying life the Nazi regime’s corruption and brutality. [em]Author tour. Agent: Caradoc King, A.P. Watt (U.K.). (Apr.)
[/em]
Details
Reviewed on: 02/20/2017
Genre: Fiction
Compact Disc - 978-0-399-56646-2
Other - 978-0-698-41313-9
Paperback - 576 pages - 978-0-399-18520-5
Paperback - 800 pages - 978-1-5247-5615-4