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Jeffery Deaver's
Garden of Beasts introduces anti-hero Paul Schumann, a notorious rubout man for the New York Mafia known for his cold and professional approach to his job. But the jig is up when he is duped by high-ranking feds who give him a choice--prison or one more impossible job: assassinate the man who's running Hitler's plan for rearming Germany. The hard-nosed German-American lands on the streets of Berlin where immediately the best-laid plans of the United States Government go awry. Schumman finds himself in a city living in fear, tracked by Berlin's best homicide detective. As the intricate chase wears on, both men will discover that the greatest evil is the ascendant Nazi party.
Deaver's novel, equal parts noir thriller and historical extrapolation, is a page-turner that offers a twisting visceral experience of the tension in Berlin during that fateful summer. He draws sympathetic portraits of everyday Germans caught between duty to country and their consciences. Into this mix, Deaver drops his coldly dangerous hitman who brawls with brownshirts, chums with Olympic athletes, collaborates with criminals, fraternizes with poets, and discovers the hero inside his hardened soul.
--Jeremy Pugh
Amazon Interview
When starting a new book by author Jeffery Deaver, expect to have the wool pulled over your eyes. His plots twist and turn and juke and jive like no others, never ending as expected and always including a jaw-dropping plot development. His latest effort, Garden of Beasts, is no exception. Amazon caught up with Deaver to discuss plotting, characters, and the perils of soap opera acting.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Books in Canada
Jeffery Deaver has chosen a time and place for his latest novel that offers innumerable opportunities to immerse his readers in a setting that history confirms was rife with Anti-Semitism, cruelty, hatred, intrigue and the barbaric treatment of fellow human beings.
This novel of Berlin in 1936, the time of Hitlers Olympics, provides the background for an unusual premise in Garden of Beasts, the literal translation of Tiergarten. Deaver, a prolific and successful author of many well-regarded novels, hits his stride quickly, introducing us to his protagonist, a German American called Paul Schumann. An unlikely hero, Schumann is employed by mob members to execute, or touch-off recalcitrant gang members in New York City.
Captured at the site of one such settling of accounts, Schumann is surprised to find out that his captors are in fact renegade members of a U.S. Government agency. He is offered a pardon and a substantial amount of money in exchange for putting his talents at their disposal in order to touch-off a senior Nazi officer responsible for Germanys clandestine rearmament.
For cover, Schumann sails to Germany under the guise of a sports writer, in the company of the U.S. Olympic team. On arrival, he spends two frenetic days in Berlin trying to fulfill his contract.
Aided and abetted by Otto Webber, a loveable old rogue involved in theft and the black market, Schumann gets ever closer to his goal. However, his trail is followed by Willi Kohl, a Berlin police inspector, whose tenacity complicates matters greatly.
Although I found this offering enjoyable, I felt that Deaver wasnt entirely successful in capturing the Berlin of 1936. I did not experience the undercurrent of evil in Germany of that time, the intense nationalism, the tensions and paranoia, the hatred of Jews, or left-wing intellectuals. Nor did I get a sense of the tawdry nightlife that Berlin was famous for.
In addition, Inspector Kohls successes in pursuing Schumann seemed to be the result of convenient coincidences rather than clever sleuthing. And though Schumann is described variously as savvy, clever and even brilliant, he walked the streets of Berlin carrying photographs of his intended victim, a gun, and smoking Chesterfield cigarettes in various locales-not what one would call careful!
Having vented these reservations, I do want to say that Deaver has created a wonderful character in Otto Webber. Webber is a refreshing, interesting and likable type-despite being a petty criminal. Also, the imaginative conclusion involving horrific experiments on human beings, and the surprising outcome, shaping our heros future, will leave Deaver fans amply satisfied.
Desmond McNally (Books in Canada)
--This text refers to the
Mass Market Paperback
edition.