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Potsdam Station. David Downing [Paperback]

David Downing
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Book Description

January 2011

In April 1945, Hitler’s Reich is on the verge of extinction. Assaulted by Allied bombs and Soviet shells, ruled by Nazis with nothing to lose, Berlin has become the most dangerous place on earth.
 
John Russell’s son Paul is stationed on the Eastern Front with the German Army, awaiting the Soviets’ final onslaught. In Berlin, Russell’s girlfriend Effi has been living in disguise, helping fugitives to escape from Germany. With a Jewish orphan to care for, she’s trying to outlast the Nazis.
 
Russell hasn’t heard from either of them since fleeing Germany in 1941. He is desperate to find out if they’re alive and to protect them from the advancing Red Army. He flies to Moscow, seeking permission to enter Berlin with the Red Army as a journalist, but when the Soviet’s arrest him as a spy, things look bleak—until they find a use for him that has him parachuting into Berlin behind German lines.




From the Hardcover edition.
--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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Review

Praise for Potsdam Station:

“John Russell has always been in the thick of things in David Downing’s powerful historical novels set largely in Berlin . . . Downing provides no platform for debate in this unsentimental novel, leaving his hero to ponder the ethics of his pragmatic choices while surveying the ground level horrors to be seen in Berlin.”—The New York Times Book Review

“Reminiscent of Woody Allen’s Zelig, Russell, the hero of Downing’s espionage series, can’t seem to resist inserting himself into climactic moments of the 20th century ... Downing has been classed in the elite company of literary spy masters Alan Furst and Philip Kerr ... that flattering comparison is generally justified. If Downing is light on character study, he’s brilliant at evoking even the smallest details of wartime Berlin on its last legs.... Given the limited cast of characters, Downing must draw on almost Dickensian reserves of coincidences and close calls to sustain the suspense of his basic hide-and-seek story line. That he does ingeniously. It helps to read Downing’s novels in order, but if Potsdam Station is your first foray into Russell’s escapades, be forewarned that you may soon feel compelled to undertake a literary reconnaissance mission to retrieve and read the earlier books.”—Washington Post

“The echo of the Allied bombings and the crash of the boots of the invading Russians permeate the pages in which David Downing vividly does justice to the drama... The book is a reminder of what happened and those who allowed it to happen...The book lives up to the others in the Russell series, serving as yet one more reminder of a world too many have entirely forgotten.”—Washington Times

“Downing is brilliant at weaving history and fiction, and this plot, with its twists and turns—all under the terrible bombardment of Berlin and the Third Reich’s death throes—is as suspenseful as they come. The end, with another twist, is equally clever and unexpected.”—Toronto Globe and Mail

“Excellent period work.”—Tulsa World

“The main attraction is the tragic mis-en-scène of a once-beautiful city undergoing the ravages of modern warfare, a wide-angle synthesis of scenes and snapshots from the history books. A wide canvas painted with broad strokes.”—Kirkus Reviews

“Gripping ... Downing convincingly portrays the final days of the Nazis in power, and his characters are rich enough to warrant a continuation of their stories, even after the war.”—Publishers Weekly

Praise for the John Russell Series:
 
“Will have readers clamoring for a sequel.”—BookPage
 
“An extraordinary evocation of Nazi Germany on the eve of war, the smell of cruelty seeping through the clean modern surface.”—C. J. Sansom, author of Revelation
 
“Wonderful…. Downing’s mingling of history and thrills makes this a must read.”—Rocky Mountain News
 
“A beautifully crafted and compelling thriller with a heart-stopping ending as John Russell learns the personal faces of good and evil. An unforgettable read.”—Charles Todd, author of the Inspector Ian Rutledge Series
 
“An atmospheric tale.”—St. Petersburg Times


From the Hardcover edition. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

About the Author

David Downing grew up in suburban London. He is the author of numerous books for adults and children, including four novels featuring Anglo-American journalist John Russell. He lives with his wife, an American acupuncturist, in Guildford, England.


From the Hardcover edition. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Compelling story Feb 21 2013
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Downing brings to life through the characters, the compelling history of events, perceptions, of ideas,and of the crumbling of a state, . Despite the hind sight knowledge of the history, the characters acting within it become compelling.
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Amazon.com: 3.8 out of 5 stars  34 reviews
66 of 71 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A wrenching end--no spoilers! July 14 2010
By AMK - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
As I enjoyed the three previous *Station* novels, I ordered this from Amazon UK as soon as it was published there and was glad I got my hands on it. That said, I was initally a little disappointed that the action had skipped across some three years from the previous volume, and that this installment picks up in 1945. It brings together all the key protagonists as the Reich contracts to its core, Berlin, and from the start, the level of suspense is high.

This book, even more than its predecessors, must have been a challenge to write. Downing has to work hard to orchestrate his characters, bringing Russell back from the US [via Moscow] and his son back from the Russian Front. The latter is relatively simple--he retreats--although that is not without its many dangers; the former is more complex and while the plot is more than plausible, its twists and turns ratchet up the plot to a higher level of physical action than the series has seen before.

I thought I had seen and read enough about Berlin in 1945 to have had a sense of time and place, but this account takes the challenge of survival to a whole new level. The noise, smells and sights are piled on, almost to breaking point--as indeed they were for the German population, who were waiting either to vanquish their enemies at the last moment, as Hitler promised, or instead to die, as most expected.

By the last third of the book, I was virtually unable to read ahead or put the book down--the tension was almost too much. It seemed impossible that the characters could survive the SS, the Red Army or the USAF bombs (and of course, in reality, many did not]. As the Thousand Year Reich shrinks to a city, then a few districts, the familiar characters are aligned, find each other, lose each other and .....well, you need to read it yourself!

I can't say this was a fun summer read. It goes well beyond the minimalist action of comparable novels by Alan Furst or Phillip Kerr and offers up instead an inferno of intense experience that feels entirely convincing and is clearly based on extensive research, like the other three volumes. For this reason, as author and reader have invested so much on these characters, it would be a shame if David Downing now abandoned these people; just as Bernard Gunther has become a more interesting character after 1945, I hope we get to see what happens to this cast in the post-war world.
28 of 28 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The vortex of war--Berlin, April 1945--a fine new book by David Downing Aug 30 2010
By Blue in Washington - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Author David Downing has previously written three first-rate war/spy novels in the "Berlin Station" series that feature Anglo-American journalist, John Russell as protagonist. The books chronicle Russell's struggles to survive the prewar political and espionage whirlpool and to protect his German family as the increasingly aggressive and xenophobic Nazi regime prepares to launch WWII in the mid-1930s. These stories have been wonderfully researched, are full of well-sketched characters and a landscape detailed with great accuracy, and always high in nervous energy and, above all else, are highly entertaining. They are all well worth reading. The fourth book in the series, "Potsdam Station", may be the best in the series as author Downing notches up the action of the story to a level well beyond intelligent and cerebral that characterized the earlier books. It's a great action/thriller read that I had difficulty putting down after the first couple of pages.

The time period in "Potsdam Station" jumps ahead to the closing days of the war in Europe, as the Allies are closing in on the German capital and the Nazi armies have mostly retreated to a perimeter of a few miles around Berlin. John Russell, after escaping from Germany in 1941 to avoid interment after the entry of the U.S. into the war, has spent most of the interim in America and with American forces in Britain and France, working as a war correspondent. He has been cut off from news of his family and loved ones in the Reich--his fiance Effi Koenen, his son Paul and his in-laws. Desperate to reach all of them before Germany falls, Russell convinces the Soviet Government to allow him to enter Berlin with their forces. The deal is made only after he agrees to perform a service to the Soviets that would smack of treason to his own and other Allied governments if they learned of it. The core of the novel then becomes the question of whether Russell can reunite with his family and protect from the likely post-defeat horrors that await the German population at the hands of Soviet forces hell bent of victory and revenge.

Meanwhile, the stories of Russell's son, Paul, and fiance, Effi, both battling for own lives in or near Berlin, are told in harrowing, day-to-day detail. Effi's underground existence and resistance activities are engaging and have the ring of authenticity, but it is Paul's story, as a young soldier with the shattered German defense forces around the capital that is really grabbing. Paul's metamorphoses from Hitler Youth true believer to political atheist bent on simple survival convincingly evolves as the Soviets move closer to Berlin and the Third Reich implodes.

This is an exciting story by a writer in top form. You will find it at least on a par with Furst, Steiner, Kerr and Shriner. Highly recommended.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Potsdam Station April 28 2011
By Stephen M. Smits - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This World War II novel centers around three related lives that have been separated by the tumult in and around war time Berlin. John Russell is an Englishman who resided in Germany for many years prior to the outbreak of the war with Russia. Russell, a journalist who earlier in his life became a Communist, escaped from Germany in 1941, leaving behind his girlfriend Effi (described as a well-known movie star before the war) and his son, Paul. Effi chose not to leave, instead involving herself in resistance efforts to rescue Jews from deportation. Paul, once a member of the Hitler Youth, is now a teen age soldier serving with the retreating German forces during the Russian advance on Berlin.

The story parallels the events of the three characters in the last days of the war. Russell is trying to return to Berlin via the Red Army's advance to reunite with Effi and protect her from the likely depradations of the Soviet troops. Paul, who was estranged from Russell after his sudden flight from the country, is closely involved in the desparate last battles against the Russian advance. Effi is threatened with exposure and goes underground to escape detection by the Gestapo.

The book is a convincing thriller. The characters nearly miraculously escape the destruction and death that others fell victim to on a massive scale. The author has close knowledge of war time Berlin and his descriptions of the characters' movements around the city create in the narrative a vivid sense of place. The novel succeeds in several dimensions: the storyline's progression is exciting, the scenes and places are realistic, and one feels fully fixed in the times, as opposed to a retrospective perspective of times gone by.

This is one of a series of novels about John Russell, not apparently the first. While the story is self-contained there was some lack of clarity about events and motives that must have been laid out in previous novels. Nonetheless, it was an enjoyable read.
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