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Secret Father: A Novel
 
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Secret Father: A Novel (Paperback)

by James Carroll (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 15.95
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Books in Canada

This is an elegant novel, the first paragraph of which had this reader eagerly anticipating a narrative that would draw me into the author’s near scholarly approach to fiction.
The story is set mostly in Berlin, just prior to the construction of the infamous Wall. We are quickly introduced to Paul Montgomery, a successful international banker and true American capitalist, benefiting from the reconstruction of post World War II Germany. Living with him in Frankfurt, following the tragic death of his disturbed mother, is Michael, his seventeen-year-old Polio-stricken son. Michael attends an American High School in Wiesbaden.
Attempting to put some space between himself and his controlling father, Michael begins associating with Ulrich (Rick) Healy, a self-styled Neo Marxist. Rick, the son of a German woman, Charlotte, and an adoptive American, General David Healy, challenges his girlfriend Katherine (Kit) Carson and Michael to attend a May Day rally in Soviet-occupied East Berlin.
At this point in the story, what began as three maturing teenagers’ efforts to establish their independence, turns into a fascinating adventure in which espionage, love and the nurturing of relationships are the key ingredients. The three are detained by the notorious Stasi, East Germany’s Secret Police, on fabricated charges. The Stasi are aware that Rick’s father heads America’s intelligence community in Germany and are prepared to exploit this fact to their advantage. Fearing an international incident, as well as being terrified for their children, Paul and Charlotte join forces and pursue their offspring to East Berlin in an attempt to rescue them.
What transpires is exciting drama in which Carroll delves deep into human weaknesses, and relationships between peers and between parents and their children. The situation is further complicated when Paul and Charlotte become irresistibly drawn to one another.
The author approaches his story in an orderly fashion, yet so vivid are his descriptions that we find ourselves surrounded by sound and movement which effectively evoke the particularly sad plight of the impoverished East German people. Carroll’s style thankfully presents his readers with challenges; he writes with an adroitness that seamlessly changes the novel’s mood from euphoria to tragedy, nostalgia to suspence. The political element always pervades Carroll’s narrative and this novel debates the role that both the U.S.A. and the Soviets played in creating the Cold War with all of its consequences. The actual reasons for the dismantling of the Berlin Wall as well as current American foreign policies are convincingly treated in this thoughtful novel.
For those readers who were enthralled by Le Carré’s The Spy Who Came In From The Cold and who have yearned for more political thrillers in the same vein-enjoy! Enjoy the tension, passion, the excitement and Carroll’s generous treatment of his characters in this most satisfying offering.
Des McNally (Books in Canada)
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


From Publishers Weekly

The heart of this fine novel, Carroll's first in nine years, is spelled out in the book's epigraph, a line from Dostoyevski: "Real love, compared to fantasy, is a harsh and dreadful thing." Seventeen-year-old Michael Montgomery, crippled by polio, lives with his banker father, Paul, in Frankfurt, Germany. Ulrich "Rick" Healy is Michael's rebellious best friend, son of an American general, David Healy, and his German wife, Charlotte. Katharine "Kit" Carson is Rick's girlfriend, also an army brat. The year is 1961 and all three attend the American high school in Wiesbaden. Rick, a budding socialist and leader of the three, decides they should cut school and travel to Berlin to attend the great May Day parade in the Eastern sector. The trip begins as a lark, but descends into chaos after their capture by East German police on trumped up currency-fraud charges. Paul and Charlotte race to Berlin to rescue their children, unaware that Rick is carrying a secret roll of film that if discovered could ignite World War III. Carroll writes with rich, lyrical ease: "Clusters of spring flowers in every color wore the beads of the recent rain like a dust of glass." His characters are richly drawn, and the pieces of his impeccably paced story fit together with the cool precision of a Mercedes-Benz. He plays the cards of his plot perfectly, each new element a revelation, leaving the reader hungrily turning the pages until the riveting story is told and the lesson is learned, that real love is indeed a harsh and dreadful thing. A few electrifying days prove enough to transform the lives of these fascinating characters-and the world-forever.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Let the Ride Begin!, Jun 4 2007
Secret Father is a confronting novel that delves into the relationships between each of its characters - Paul and Michael Montgomery, Kit, Ulrich, and Charlotte - and their past, as it navigates through the eventful three days of being an American in Berlin, Germany 1961 (before the Berlin Wall was erected). Altering between the views of the father and the son, James Carroll brings you deeper into the minds of the two narrators, the heart of their relationships, and the centre of the game of lies, deceptions, and politics. The novel is filled with lies, deceit, betrayal, sacrifices, adventures, separations, love, and loss that are all true to the times of the novel setting. Every page will take you to on a thrill ride that will unravel the unknown - past, present, and future - bit, by bit. Let the ride begin!
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3.0 out of 5 stars A Good Effort, May 14 2004
By Robert C. Power (Harrisburg, PA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Secret Father: A Novel (Hardcover)
Secret Father, James Carroll's newest novel, provides challenges to its readers. Most of the characters are not very likeable; others are remote - existing only in the memories of other characters; the plot is slower than those of the thrillers it resembles (it is not a thriller, at least in the technical sense). It is nonethless an engaging read and a welcome return to fiction by Mr. Carroll.

Carroll's novels usually focus on unusual and talented people caught up in significant 20th century events. In his best novels, such as Mortal Friends, the characters are so rich that readers can't wait to find out how the characters end their stories. The plots zoom, with time passing quickly for both the characters and the readers. Lack of attention for a page can result in losing command of time, place, and machination. There is usually a full measure of sadness, often related to a lost or poisoned love.

Secret Father revisits these usual elements, but with a different and less satisfying rhythm. Almost the entire book takes place over a three day span. Even with flashbacks and forwards, the epic scale common to most of Carroll's work is absent. Several fascinating backstories are truncated. Still, the sense of place and presence - 1961 Berlin and the post WWII blame and spy games - are up with Carroll's best. He also captures the dynamics of American military and business people.

Reading Secret Father is like listening to a new album by a favorite jazz artist who is trying to do things a little differently. Here they are intimacy and focus on a very few days in several people's lives rather than a big broadstroke about significant issues. He could probably have written another "big book" about the period, and it might have been more fun to read, this book was his real love right now rather than our fantasy love, and Secret Father will tell you what that means. It's better than a "greatest hits" album because it's new and different, but you can still listen carefully for familiar chord changes and smile.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Gripping!, Jan 12 2004
By Curtis Grindahl (San Anselmo, California USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Secret Father: A Novel (Hardcover)
James Carroll tells gripping stories that invariably invite us beneath the compelling events unfolding before us into the heart of his characters, encouraging us to join with them as they grapple with what it means to be a human being in a world filled with conflict and emotional complexity.

The setting is Berlin before the Iron Curtain was constructed with a focus on events unfolding within the world of espionage. Yet it is the relationships between the characters of this ensemble that lie at the center of this story. Where does one's sense of responsibility for the people we love begin and end? What motivates us to expressions of concern? When do we step back and allow our loved ones to grapple for themselves with what life brings them? We have fathers and sons, mothers and sons, friends and lovers doing their best to make their lives together work. Sometimes they simply don't.

The circumstances confronting these characters, both in the present and within their pasts, are worth considering. Mr. Carroll does a fine job of drawing the reader into both the intriguing story and the characters, to the point that what happens to each of them really matters. There are no cookie cutters being applied here folks, just damn good writing, which is precisely what I've come to expect from this fine author.

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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars not just a spy thriller
SECRET FATHER is really two novels in one. First is an espionage thriller set in early 1960s Berlin, just before the Berlin Wall went up. Read more
Published on Dec 23 2003 by Simon Crowe

3.0 out of 5 stars above average
Mr. Carroll has devised a clever plot although the writing style leaves something to be desired, in my opinion. Read more
Published on Dec 22 2003 by Review Boy

5.0 out of 5 stars A Modern Masterpiece
James Carroll's Secret Father is set in Germany at the height of Cold War tensions. The Berlin Wall is about to go up, but three teenagers, all students at the American high... Read more
Published on Oct 3 2003 by James W. Christian

4.0 out of 5 stars Berlin is divided in this sensational cold war thriller
From the outset there is so much tension and distrust in this involving and truly remarkable literary thriller. Read more
Published on Oct 2 2003 by M. J Leonard

5.0 out of 5 stars SECRET FATHER
I absolutely loved this book. It has a slow pace in the beginning but builds both the characters and the plot in a richly detailed and satisfying manner. Read more
Published on Oct 2 2003 by Mary L. Good

5.0 out of 5 stars Riveting cold war story
I loved this book, read it over a weekend. I've never read James Carroll's fiction before, but I did enjoy American Requiem and Constantine's Sword. Read more
Published on Sep 16 2003

4.0 out of 5 stars Fathers, sons, and the iron curtain between them.
Two families, two sons, and the devastating complications that engulf their lives during one weekend in April, 1961, provide a unique perspective on international gamesmanship in... Read more
Published on Sep 5 2003 by Mary Whipple

3.0 out of 5 stars Spies, fathers and sons
James Carroll has made a career of stories in which the grand sweep of history is summarized in the infinite choices of fallible and flawed people, and his first novel in nine... Read more
Published on Aug 29 2003 by Ron Franscell, Author of 'The ...

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