Book Review – The Draughtsman by Robert Lautner

About the Book

Book cover of The Draughtsman by Robert Lautner

Erfurt, Germany, 1944. Ernst Beck has a new job at prestigious engineering firm, Topf & Sons. Finally he can make a contribution to the war effort, provide for his beautiful wife, Etta, and make his parents proud. But there is a price.

He is assigned to the Special Ovens Department and tasked with annotating plans for new crematoria that are deliberately designed to burn day and night. Their destination: the concentration camps. Topf’s new client: the SS. Ernst must choose between turning a blind eye, or speaking out for the fate of thousands.

Format: Paperback (481 pages) Publisher: The Borough Press
Publication date: 8th February 2018 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

Ernst’s story demonstrates how easily someone can become complicit in evil. The offer of a well-paid job with a highly respected and successful company means the possibility of leaving behind the hand-to-mouth existence of himself and his wife, Etta. There’s even a rent free house that comes with the job, containing more rooms than he has furniture to fill and, wonder of wonders, a telephone. His parents are delighted at his good fortune.

Ernst’s new job involves something he’s good at and has been trained for. He believes he is making a contribution to the war effort. He doesn’t question why the SS might require so many ovens and with such high capacity. But perhaps there really are that many criminals who succumb to typhus in the camps? ‘Prisons need ovens. Cities need sewers. Unpleasant, but the way of things.’

Hannah Arendt’s phrase ‘the banality of evil’ came frequently to mind whilst reading the book and this evil was spread wider than we might imagine and often, as it were, hidden in plain sight. ‘This was how it was done. The tanks and the aircraft were the hammers, but the bureaucracy, the lists and the files by the men in smart shoes and ties were the nails to keep everything in place.’

This is mass murder as a bureaucratic operation with the SS’s prime concern being improving the efficiency of the ovens, ensuring they break down less often and keeping costs to a minimum. Hence the nature of the building Ernst is tasked with working on, something so horrific one cannot imagine it could have been real. (It was, although thankfully it was never built.)

Time and time again I returned to the questions: How did a whole nation allow the ‘normalisation’ of mass murder? How did one individual manage to convince good people to do awful things? (A clever touch is that Hitler is never mentioned by name, but always referred to as ‘He’ or ‘Him’.)

Only Etta has misgivings about Ernst’s work which increase when she learns the nature of the task he is working on.

Eventually Ernst’s eyes are opened to the truth. And when Erfurt, which has been largely immune from the direct impact of the war because of its geographical position, is no longer safe from Allied bombing raids, it becomes clear to him that Germany is not winning the war as the propaganda suggests. Far from it. But what should he do? He’s just one man and he knows the risks involved in speaking out. Not just for himself but for Etta. Even more so for Etta, as it turns out. On the other hand, he fears the information he possesses may be destroyed in the chaos of defeat and the world will never know about it.

Throughout the book there are chilling juxtapositions of the beautiful and the terrible. When Hans Klein, head of the euphemistically named ‘Special Ovens’ Department, shows Ernst to the floor in the factory where he will work, he says, ‘There is a fine view of the hills. All day you can see the smoke from Buchenwald rising to them. It is a pleasant room.’ The book depicts many disturbing scenes but the humanity of the characters of Ernst, Etta and their friend Paul somehow keeps you from feeling completely without hope.

In his Author’s Note, Robert Lautner explains that he started the story wanting to ask the question, ‘What would you do?’ but the question became, ‘What should you do? Now. Today’. It is possible that even today in some small way, and entirely unintentionally, we all may be contributing to a system that profits from the exploitation and misery of others.

The Draughtsman is a chilling reminder of how easy it is not to see what’s going on before your eyes, to question it or to look the other way and thereby be drawn into a state of complicity. And that there is evil in the world that most of us are unable to contemplate but it’s there all the same.

In three words: Chilling, thought-provoking, intense
Try something similar: The Zone of Interest by Martin Amis


About the Author

Author Robert Lautner/Mark Keating

Robert Lautner was born in Middlesex in 1970. Before becoming a writer he owned his own comic-book store, worked as a wine merchant, photographic consultant and recruitment consultant. He now lives on the Pembrokeshire coast in a wooden cabin with his wife and children. (Robert Lautner is the pen name of the author, Mark Keating.)

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Book Review – The Second Sleep by Robert Harris

About the Book

Book cover of The Second Sleep by Robert Harris

All civilisations think they are invulnerable. History warns us none is.

1468. A young priest, Christopher Fairfax, arrives in a remote Exmoor village to conduct the funeral of his predecessor. The land around is strewn with ancient artefacts – coins, fragments of glass, human bones – which the old parson used to collect. Did his obsession with the past lead to his death?

As Fairfax is drawn more deeply into the isolated community, everything he believes – about himself, his faith and the history of his world – is tested to destruction.

Format: Paperback (414 pages) Publisher: Arrow
Publication date: 20th August 2019 Genre: Historical Fiction, Science Fiction

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My Review

The Second Sleep starts off like a historical mystery but before long there’s a ‘wow moment’ and you realise it’s going to be something entirely different. This makes it quite difficult to write a review without giving too much away.

Safe to say, from the descriptions of everyday life you can easily imagine yourself to be in the 15th century. Life is simple but harsh, regulated by the seasons and by the strictures of religious doctrine which prescribe certain opinions as heresy. Questioning the teaching of the Church is not a good idea; it can make you powerful enemies. Most people make a living (if you can call it that) from the land or work in the local mill. They marry early and die early. Every now and again, when tilling the land or constructing a building, they come across an object completely unfamiliar to them and whose purpose they cannot identify.

Dedicated young priest, Christopher Fairfax finds everything he’s been taught to believe – and has preached to others – is turned upside down by the discovery of a book containing an earth-shattering revelation. It brings about a crisis of faith but also ignites in him a passion to discover the truth. Fairfax, two influential members of the community and a fanatical antiquarian together embark on a search that is full of peril, not least because discovery would threaten their liberty, and quite possibly their lives.

I loved the setting, the characters, the relationships between them and the page-turning tension of the search for answers. The ending, whilst sobering, is completely in tune with the theme of the book.

The book’s title references the notion that our ancestors may have adopted ‘biphasic sleep’ in which a first and second period of nightly sleep was broken by a short period of wakefulness. It can be viewed as a metaphor for the story that unfolds. Robert Harris seems to have the knack of subtly weaving contemporary issues into historical novels and this one, with its warnings about the fragile nature of civilisation and the risk of assuming its invulnerability, is no exception. Indeed it may be even more relevant now than it was when this book was written.

In three words: Compelling, imaginative, thought-provoking
Try something similar: The Time Machine by H. G. Wells


About the Author

Author Robert Harris

Robert Harris is the author of fifteen bestselling novels: the Cicero Trilogy – ImperiumLustrum and Dictator – FatherlandEnigmaArchangelPompeiiThe GhostThe Fear IndexAn Officer and a Spy, which won four prizes including the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction, ConclaveMunichThe Second SleepV2 and Act of Oblivion. His work has been translated into forty languages and nine of his books have been adapted for cinema and television. He lives in West Berkshire with his wife, Gill Hornby.

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