Book Review – The Ashes of Berlin by Luke McCallin

About the Book

ashes

It’s 1947 and Gregor Reinhardt has been hired back onto Berlin’s civilian police force. The city is divided among the victorious allied powers, tensions are growing, and the police are riven by internal rivalries as factions within it jockey for power and influence with Berlin’s new masters.

When a man is found slain in a broken-down tenement, Reinhardt embarks on a gruesome investigation. It seems a serial killer is on the loose, and matters only escalate when it’s discovered that one of the victims was the brother of a Nazi scientist.

Reinhardt’s search for the truth takes him across the divided city and soon embroils him in a plot involving the Western Allies and the Soviets. And as he comes under the scrutiny of a group of Germans who want to continue the war – and faces an unwanted reminder from his own past – Reinhardt realizes that this investigation could cost him everything as he pursues a killer who believes that all wrongs must be avenged…

Format: ebook (450 pages) Publisher: No Exit Press
Publication date: 8th December 2016 Genre: Historical Fiction, Thriller

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My Review

The Ashes of Berlin is is the third in the series of stories featuring Gregor Reinhardt, now an Inspector in the post-war Berlin police force, and to my mind, it is the strongest so far.  Like its predecessors, The Man From Berlin and The Pale House, it is an extremely well-crafted detective story in which Reinhardt pursues a ruthless killer across the divided city of Berlin.

The meticulous research of the author is apparent in the evocative descriptions of the ravaged city, the orphaned children, the food and fuel shortages where a packet of Lucky Strike cigarettes is valued currency. The turbulent political situation in which each of the Allies is attempting to exert and protect their power and influence is realistically brought to life.

In Gregor Reinhardt, the author has created a compelling character with  believable doubts and flaws. A loner, shunned by colleagues suspicious of his allegiances and unsure who he can trust, in this book he reminded me of Alec Leamas in John Le Carre’s masterful The Spy Who Came In From the Cold.   Prone to almost obsessive introspection, Reinhardt once again questions himself and his principles, battling his inner demons – his capacity for violence (the “darker side of himself)”, his weakness for alcohol, driven by the desire to atone for perceived past actions (or inactions). However, he is also proud of his skill and experience and unwilling to “bend with the wind” like so many of his colleagues.

Widowed and estranged from his son who is missing on the Russian front, there is a touching scene in which Reinhardt is drawn to seek a connection with his past life.  Behind the search for the killer, which has plenty of satisfying twists and turns, the novel depicts the dreadful legacy of the war on individuals; the stories they cannot bear to tell but that weigh heavy on them and, in some cases, drive their actions.

I thought this was a terrific read and I was torn between wanting to find out what happened and not wanting it to end. My personal wish for Reinhardt (who I confess I’m a little in love with) was fulfilled in the last sentence.  Thank you for that, Luke.

I received an advance review copy courtesy of No Exit Press via NetGalley.

In three words: Atmospheric, gripping, satisfying
Try something similar: A Death in Berlin by Simon Scarrow

About the Author

Luke McCallin was born in England, grew up in Africa, was educated around the world, and has worked with the UN as a humanitarian relief worker and peacekeeper in the Caucasus, the Sahel, and the Balkans. His experiences have driven his writing, in which he explores what happens to normal people put under abnormal pressures, inspiring a historical mystery series built around an unlikely protagonist, Gregor Reinhardt, a German intelligence officer and a former Berlin detective chased out of the police by the Nazis. The Man From Berlin was published in 2013, followed by a sequel, The Pale House in 2014, The Ashes of Berlin in 2017 and Where God Does Not Walk in 2021.

He lives with his wife and two children in an old farmhouse in France in the Jura Mountains. He has a master’s degree in political science, speaks French, is learning Spanish, and can just get by in Russian. When he’s not working or writing or spending time with his family, he enjoys reading history, playing squash, and keeping goal for the UN football team.

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Book Review of Legacy of the Lynx by Clio Gray

About the Book

legacy

1798. Three people, two brutal murders, one promise…

Golo Eck is searching for the fabled lost library of The Lynx, Europe’s first scientific society, founded in 1603.

Fergus, his friend and fellow adventurer, is on the trail of the legend in Ireland when he becomes embroiled in the uprising of the United Irish against English rule. His only hope of escape is Greta, a courageous messenger for the United Irish cause. Following the bloody battles of New Ross and Vinegar Hill, Fergus is missing, and Greta is on the run. 

Golo meanwhile suspects other forces are on the trail of the Lynx, and he heads to Holland in pursuit. When Golo’s ship founders and he disappears, his ward Ruan is left to fend for himself, a stranger in a strange land.  Can Ruan pursue the trail to the lost library? Will Golo and Fergus be found? Can Greta escape Ireland with her very life? And will the truth of the Legacy of the Lynx finally be revealed?

Format: ebook (268 pages) Publisher: Urbane
Publication date: 3rd November 2016 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

I love my historical fiction, particularly with a mystery element, so I was immediately drawn to this book both by the cover and the description.  However, despite having a large and imaginative cast of characters and lots of action, the novel just didn’t work for me.  

The author is particularly ruthless with her characters, many shortly after they have been introduced, and one of the main characters, Ruan Peat, comes across as a stroppy teenager who is difficult to warm to or care about.  Although there are lots of action scenes, a large section of the book is based around events in the Irish Rebellion which seemed extraneous to the main plot, the search for the lost library. 

Throughout the book, I found myself waiting for more information about the history of The Lynx but when some colourful details were eventually given these were recounted very briefly by a minor character.  This is clearly a well-researched book inspired by historical fact and most of the writing evokes the period in which it is set.  However, there were some modern phrases that jarred (such as “keeping his mouth zipped”, “plonked himself down”, “split early doors”).   I felt the book did pick up towards the end as the individual threads were woven together.

About the Author

Clio Gray was born in Yorkshire, and, after a childhood spent first in Saltburn-by-the-Sea and then Devon, she went to London to study philosophy, then Leeds, where she completed a degree in the History of Art. Finally she took a Post Grad Dip Lib, and went into the public library service, where she remains now, after upping sticks to settle in the Highlands of Scotland. 

A life-long lover of books, she kept on in her established career in libraries, and now works in Tain Library in Easter Ross. Inspired by the Highlands and its unique Nordic connections, she finally settled down to write, beginning with the short story circuit, before moving on to novels. Since then she has won a number of prestigious awards and competitions, including the Harry Bowling First Novel Award in 2004 and The Scotsman Orange Short Story Competition in 2006, nominated for the Man Booker in 2015 and longlisted for the Bailey’s Fiction Prize 2016.

Clio is the founder of HISSAC, the Highlands and Islands Short Story Association and is Chair of the Judges of HISSAC’s Annual Open Short Story and Flash Fiction Competitions. She also sat on the founding committee of Bloody Scotland, the first International Crime Writing Festival of Scotland. (Photo/bio: Author website)

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