Potsdam Station (John Russell World War II Spy Thriller #4) (A John Russell WWII Spy Thriller)
Potsdam Station (John Russell World War II Spy Thriller #4) (A John Russell WWII Spy Thriller) book cover

Potsdam Station (John Russell World War II Spy Thriller #4) (A John Russell WWII Spy Thriller)

Price
$39.01
Format
Hardcover
Pages
304
Publisher
Soho Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1569479179
Dimensions
6.37 x 1.16 x 9.29 inches
Weight
1.35 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly Set in early 1945, Downing's gripping fourth novel featuring Anglo-American journalist John Russell (after Stettin Station) finds Russell in the Soviet Union. As the Russians approach Berlin, Russell devotes his energies to trying to reunite with his loved ones-his 18-year-old son, Paul, a member of the German army on the Eastern Front, and his lover, Effi Koenen, a former actress who now works to smuggle Jews to safety. Russell attempts to persuade the Russians that he should accompany them into Berlin, but they suspect that he's an American spy sent to sell them on the idea that the U.S. and Britain have no interest in the German capital. Meanwhile, the Nazis pick up a group of refugees Effi helped to escape, raising the prospect that one of them might disclose her involvement. 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. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved. 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’sxa0Zelig, 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 mastersxa0Alan Furstxa0and 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: "Epic in scope, Mr. Downing's "Station" cycle creates a fictional universe rich with a historian's expertise but rendered with literary style and heart." —The Wall Street Journal “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 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. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Franco’s furniture April 6 –7 As they walked south towards Diedersdorf and the battalion command post, Paul Gehrts realised that he and his companion Gerhart Reheusser were grinning like idiots. The cloudless blue sky, warm sunshine and dust-free easterly breeze were responsible, banishing, if only for a few minutes, the grim anxiety that filled their waking hours. For the moment the occasional rattle of a distant machine-gun, the odd boom of a tank cannon or gun, could be ignored.About five kilometres behind them, the Seelow Heights fell sharply away to the Oderbruch, the meadowlands which lay between the escarpment and the Oder River. Soon—in a few days, most likely—the men and tanks of the Red Army would storm across those meadows and throw themselves at the German defences. The Russians would die in their thousands, but thousands more would follow. It would only be a matter of time. But a sunny day was a sunny day, with a power all its own. The two men were approaching the first houses of the small town when they came upon a large group of soldiers spread out along the side of the road. Few looked older than fifteen, and one boy was actually passing round his army-issue bag of sweets, as if he were at a friend’s birthday party. Most had their panzerfausts lying beside them on the grass, and all looked exhausted—the disposable rocket-launchers were a crippling weight for all but the strongest children. Their troop leader, who was probably almost out of his teens, was examining a weeping blister on one of his charges’ feet. As Paul and Gerhard walked past he looked up, and offered them a brief rueful smile.Almost all of Diedersdorf ’s usual residents had left or been evacuated, and were now presumably clogging the roads leading westward, but the town was not being neglected—in the small central square an over-zealous staff-sergeant was supervising another band of young recruits in sweeping the cobbles.‘The madness of the military mind,’ Gerhard muttered, not for the first time.As if to prove his point, a half-track drove across the square, sending eddies of dust in every direction. The sergeant endured a violent fit of coughing, then ordered his boys back to work.The division mechanics had set up shop in the goods yard of the town station, close to where a large dug-out had been excavated in the railway embankment for the battalion command post. The corporal at the improvised desk in the goods shed groaned when he saw Paul’s machine-gun. ‘Don’t tell me—it jams.’‘It does.’‘How often?’‘Too often for comfort.’The corporal sighed. ‘I’ll get someone to have a look,’ he said.‘Come back in an hour.’Two bench seats from the nearby railway station had been left outside the battalion command post entrance, offering a place to wait and watch the war go by. The two of them had only been sitting there a few minutes when a captured Red Army jeep pulled up. A Wehrmacht major and two NCOs leapt out, shoved their manacled Russian prisoner onto the other seat, and disappeared into the dugout. He looked like an ordinary rifleman, with dark dishevelled hair and vaguely Mongoloid features. He was wearing a bloodstained kaftan above badly frayed trousers and worse-worn boots. He sat there with his mouth slightly open, his eyes gazing blankly into space.But he wasn’t stupid. Catching Paul’s look he returned it, and his eyes, once focused, seemed full of intelligence. ‘Cigarette?’ he asked.That, at least, was one thing the Reich wasn’t short of. Gerhart got up and gave him one, placing it between the Russian’s lips and offering a lighted match.‘Spasibo.’‘You’re welcome, Ivan.’‘No, he fucking isn’t,’ another voice exploded behind them. It was one of the NCOs who had brought him in. He knocked the cigarette from the Russian’s mouth, throwing sparks all over his face, and swung round on Gerhart. ‘What the fuck do you think you’re doing?’‘What I hope . . .’‘Shut the fuck up. And get out of my sight.’ He turned away, grabbed the Russian under one arm and hustled him through the curtained door of the dug-out.‘Wonderful,’ was all Gerhart said. He looked at the still-swaying curtain, as if contemplating pursuit. ‘Let’s try and find some hot water,’ Paul suggested.‘I’m not going anywhere,’ Gerhart told him. ‘I’m not going to let a shit like that order me around.’Paul shrugged and sat down again. There was no use arguing with Gerhart at times like this.They’d been sitting in silence for about a quarter of an hour when shouting started inside. This went on for several more minutes, and culminated in a gunshot. A few moments later, there was another.Gerhart leapt to his feet.‘Let’s go and find that hot water,’ Paul said quietly.Gerhart spun round, anger in his eyes, but something in his friend’s expression did the trick. He closed his eyes, breathed out heavily, and offered Paul a rueful smile. ‘Okay,’ he said. ‘If we both take a bath, the war might stink a little less. Let’s go and find one.’But they were out of luck. The only hot water in town came complete with a queue, and was already brown. A drink proved easier to come by, but the quality was equally dire, and after scorching their throats with a single glass neither felt thirsty for more. They went back to the workshop, but the mechanic still hadn’t got round to checking the machine-gun. Rather than return to their seat outside the command post, they pulled a couple of armchairs out of the empty house next door, and settled down to wait. Paul thought about checking the location of the nearest basement, but found he couldn’t be bothered. The sun was still shining, and it looked like the Red Air Force was having an afternoon off. If worse came to worst, they could simply throw themselves into the dugout across the yard.Gerhart was devouring a cigarette, angrily sucking in smoke and flicking off ash while he wrestled with his inner demons. He was still pissed off about the Russian prisoner, Paul realised. Which might be admirable, but was unlikely to serve any useful purpose.Paul had known him a long time. They’d been best friends at their first school, but Gerhart’s father had moved his family to Hamburg when both were nine, and they’d only met up again two years ago, when both were drafted into the same flakhelfer unit at the Zoo Bunker Gun Tower. Gerhart had persuaded Paul that pre-enlistment in the Wehrmacht made sense, partly because he wanted out of the flakhelfer, partly to avoid SS recruitment. Paul had resisted for one reason—the girl he had just fallen in love with was one of those directing the neighbouring tower’s searchlights. But after Madeleine’s mounting took a direct hit he could hardly wait to get away. He and Gerhart had started their compulsory labour service together, and then been called up as seventeen-year-olds when the age limit was lowered early in 1944. They were still gunners, but now they were soldiers of the 20th Panzergrenadier Division.They had been with their Pak-43 88mm gun for almost a year, somehow surviving the collapse of Army Group Centre the previous summer and the winter battles in Poland. When they had left Berlin for their first Ostfront posting, Gerhart’s mother had taken Paul aside and asked him to look after her son, but if anything Gerhart had looked after Paul. Gerhart’s relentless negativity when it came to the war, the army and the Führer was sometimes irritating, but he never let it lessen his sense of duty toward his comrades. In fact, the one probably reinforced the other.These days, Gerhart was the closest thing Paul had to family. His father John Russell had deserted him in 1941; his mother Ilse and stepfather Matthias Gehrts had died in a car crash the previous year. His stepsisters were alive as far as he knew, but Paul hadn’t seen them since their evacuation two years ago, and the relationship had never been really close. He hadn’t spoken to his mother’s brother Thomas since their argument about his father almost three years ago.‘Here he comes,’ Gerhart interjected. A mechanic was walking towards them, the machine-gun over his shoulder.‘Is it fixed?’ Paul asked.The mechanic shrugged. ‘Seems to be. I just a filed off a few micrometres. Give it a proper test in the woods—random gunfire this far behind the front makes people nervous.’Paul hoisted the gun over his own shoulder. ‘Thanks.’‘No problem.’They walked back through Diedersdorf ’s empty streets. The young recruits on broom duty had vanished, but a Waffen-SS staff car was sitting in the otherwise empty square, and the gruppenführer sitting in the back seat turned a surprisingly anxious pair of eyes in their direction.‘He’s seen the future, and it’s not looking black,’ Gerhart joked.The sweet-sucking youths had also moved on, and the road running north was empty. After about a kilometre they turned off into the trees, and followed the winding track to their position on the eastern edge of the wood. The unit’s two cruciform-mounted 88mm anti-tank guns were dug in twenty metres apart, covering the distant Seelow-Diedersdorf road, which curved toward and across their line of vision. The first few Soviet tanks to bypass Seelow would certainly pay for their temerity, but those coming up behind them . . . well, their fate would depend on whether or not Paul’s unit received another shipment of shells. They currently had nineteen, and two of those would be needed to destroy their own guns.They’d been here for over two months, and the dug-out accommodation was as spacious as any Paul had known in his short military career, three steps leading down to a short tunnel, with a tiny command post on one side and a small room full of bunks on the other. The ceilings weren’t exactly thick, but they were well buttressed, and even a direct hit should prove survivable. The halftracks they needed to move the guns were parked a hundred metres away in the forest, and heavily camouflaged against a sighting from the air. They had fuel enough for sixty miles between them, which seemed unlikely to be enough. Then again, if no more shells were delivered, the guns would become effectively useless, and they could all ride back to Berlin in a single vehicle.It had been a quiet day, Sergeant Utermann told them. The artillery barrage had been shorter than usual, and even less accurate—nothing had fallen within a hundred metres of their small clearing. There’d been no Soviet air raid, and three Messerschmitt 109s had appeared overhead, the first they’d seen for a week. Maybe things were looking up at last.‘And maybe Marlene Dietrich came home,’ Gerhart added sarcastically, once they were out of earshot. Utermann was a decent man, but a bit of an idiot.Out in the clearing Hannes and Neumaier were kicking the unit’sfootball to and fro. Hannes had found it in a Diedersdorf garden the previous week, and had hardly stopped playing with it since.‘Shall we challenge them?’ Gerhart asked.‘Okay,’ Paul agreed without much enthusiasm.Greatcoats were found for posts, and two men from the other gun team cajoled into making it three-a-side. Paul had played a great deal as a child, and had loved watching his team Hertha. But the Hitlerjugend had turned the game into one more form of ‘struggle’, and he had always gone to the Plumpe stadium with his dad. A wave of anger accompanied that thought, and before he knew it he was almost breaking Neumaier’s ankle with a reckless tackle.‘Sorry, sorry,’ he said, offering the other boy his hand.Neumaier gave him a look. ‘What happens to you on a football pitch?’‘Sorry,’ Paul said again.Neumaier shook his head and smiled.The light was starting to fade, but they played on, engrossed in moving the football across the broken forest floor—until the Soviet planes swept over the trees. They were Tupolevs, although right until the last moment Paul was somehow expecting Sergeant Utermann’s Messerschmitt 109s. Like everyone else he dived for the ground, instinctively clawing at the earthen floor as fire and wood exploded above him. He felt a sharp pain in his left leg, but nothing more.A single bomb, he thought. Turning his head he could see a wood splinter about ten centimetres long protruding from the back of his calf. Without really thinking, he reached back and yanked it out. His luck was in—there was no sudden gush of arterial blood.Two large trees were in flames on the western edge of the clearing, where Gerhart had gone to collect the ball. Paul counted the figures getting to their feet, and knew that one was missing. He scrambled to his own and rushed across to where his friend should be.He found Gerhart lying on his back, a shard of wood driven deep into his throat, a bib of blood spread across his chest. Sinking to his knees, Paul thought he caught a flicker in the other’s eyes, but they never moved again.It seemed at first as if the DC-3 had landed in a forest clearing, but as the plane swung round John Russell caught sight of a long grey terminal building. The legend ‘Moscow Airport (Vnukovo)’ was emblazoned across the facade in enormous Cyrillic letters, beneath an even larger hammer and sickle. He had expected the Khodynka airfield, which he had last seen in August 1939, decked out with swastikas for the welcoming of Ribbentrop and the signing of the Nazi-Soviet Pact. He had never heard of Vnukovo, and hoped it was closer to the city centre than it looked. A wooden stairway on wheels was rolled out to meet the plane. It looked like something left over from the siege of Troy, and creaked alarmingly as the passengers stepped gingerly down to the tarmac. The sun was still above the tree line, and much warmer than Russell had anticipated. He joined the straggling procession towards the terminal building, a concrete edifice with all the architectural interest of a British pillbox. The constructivists would be turning in their graves, he thought, and they wouldn’t be alone. As Russell had discovered in 1939, trips to Stalin’s Soviet Union were guaranteed to disappoint those like himself who had welcomed the original revolution.He joined the end of the queue, thinking that on this occasion a sense of ideological let-down was the least of his worries. First and foremost was the question of whether the Soviets had forgiven him for refusing their offer of hospitality at the end of 1941. After his escape from Germany—an escape which German comrades under Soviet orders had died to make possible—Stalin’s representatives in Stockholm had done their best to persuade him that Moscow was an ideal place to sit out the war. They had even plucked his old contact Yevgeny Shchepkin out of the international ether in a vain attempt to talk him round.He had explained to Shchepkin that he wasn’t ungrateful, but that America had to be his first port of call. His mother and employer were there, and when it came to raising a hue and cry on behalf of Europe’s Jews, the New York Times seemed a much better bet than Pravda.What he hadn’t told Shchepkin was how little he trusted the Soviets. He couldn’t even work out why they were so keen to have him on board. Did they still see him and his rather unusual range of connections as a potential asset, to be kept in reserve for a relevant moment? Or did he know more about their networks and ways of operating than he was supposed to? If so, did they care? Would he receive the Order of Lenin or a one-way trip to the frozen north? It was impossible to tell. Dealing with Stalin’s regime was like the English game of Battleships which he and his son Paul had used to play—the only way you found out you were on the wrong square was by moving onto it, and having it blow up in your face.The queue was moving at a snail’s pace, the sun now winking through the pines. Almost all the arrivals were foreigners, most of them Balkan communists, come to lay gifts at Stalin’s feet. There had been a couple of Argentineans sitting across from Russell, and their only topic of conversation had been the excellent shooting in Siberia. Diplomats presumably, but who the hell knew in the violently shuffled world of April 1945? As far as Russell could tell, he was the only Western journalist seeking entry to Stalin’s realm.For all his apprehensiveness, he was pleased to have got this far. It was seven days since his hurried departure from Rheims in northeast France, the location of the Western Allies’ military HQ. He had left on the morning of March 29th, after receiving off-the-record confirmation that Eisenhower had written to Stalin on the previous day, promising the Red Army the sole rights to Berlin. If Russell was going to ride into his old home town on a tank, it would have to be on a Russian one.A swift exchange of cables with his editor in San Francisco had given him sanction to switch his journalistic sphere of operations, and, more importantly, some sort of semi-official fig leaf to cover up an essentially personal odyssey. Accompanying the Red Army into Hitler’s capital would prove a wonderful scoop for any Western journalist, but that was not why Russell wanted to do it.Just getting to Moscow had been complicated enough, involving, as it did, a great swing round the territories occupied by the Wehrmacht, an area which still stretched from northern Norway to northern Italy. Three trains had brought him to Marseilles, and a series of flights had carried him eastwards via a succession of cities—Rome, Belgrade and Bucharest—all with the unfortunate distinction of having been bombed by both sides. He had expected difficulties everywhere, but bribery had worked in Marseilles and Rome, and broad hints that he would put Tito on the cover of Time magazine had eased his entry into Belgrade and, by default, the wider area of Soviet control. The rest had been easy. Once you were in, you were in, and the authorities in Bucharest, Odessa and Kiev had waved him on with barely a glance at his passport or papers. No doubt the various immigration bureaucracies would recover their essential nastiness in due course, but for the moment everyone seemed too exhausted by the war to care.Moscow, though, was likely to be different, and Russell was half expecting orders to leave on the next return flight. Or worse. But when his turn finally came he was let through with only the most cursory check of his documents. It was almost as if they were expecting him. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • 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.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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★★
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Potsdam Station

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.
18 people found this helpful
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Excellent on its own terms

Having finished this and run through the earlier books, and having read the rather polarized reviews for the series on Amazon by others who share my interest in the period and genre, I thought it might make sense to put down my thoughts. This is an excellent conclusion to a fascinating series. It is not Kerr's Bernie Gunther books, nor is it Alan Furst. I don't think the author intended them to be in that category. While the other authors (brilliantly) take the conventions of noir crime and espionage genre fiction and set them in the darker corners of Nazi Europe (and in Kerr's case the aftermath) Downing is I think doing something much less plot and atmosphere dependent. Kerr and Furst could be turned into wonderful movie thrillers, but Downing is rather more of a sprawling BBC series where the characters and what occurs to them over time is the lens by which the horrors of the Third Reich are examined. These books are basically about what happens to a group of essentially likeable but rather lucky and privileged characters from 1938 to the fall of Berlin who are not hard-bitten detectives, professional spies or heroic resistance figures. I can see why people expecting a taut plot and epic confrontations would be bemused by the rather meandering route the characters take and the sections describing the heroes watching soccer, having a picnic or a long lunch in some detail, but at least for me that was one of the strengths of the book -- Russell isn't a conventional hero or antihero, just a fairly decent person in a world gone mad. The scenes with him lounging around with Effi or taking Paul to Hertha are necessary (a) because Russell's primary motivation for almost all of his actions involve Effi and Paul, and they're critical to establishing why he does what he does (the moral weight of which increases exponentially over time) and (b) along the way, they provide wonderful period details (the lunches move ever downward in quality with rationing, the Hitler Youth starts eating away at the Hertha games, etc.). For me, at least, this approach worked very well indeed because the interpersonal relations were sufficiently well drawn by the end that I really cared about what happened to them, and watching these non-heroic, rather sheltered and occasionally self-absorbed people go through the Nazi period succeeded in illuminating some of the historical and moral questions of the period in a new light. The drawback of this approach is that this series in particularly ill-suited to being read out of sequence: You really need to read them all, because taken in isolation the plots and period details aren't perhaps up to the competition's -- the strength is watching what happens over time (e.g. the trainspotter's and Baedeker guide aspects of the descriptive passages on Berlin make more sense by the time the last book comes around and the shelters are in the U-Bahn). I'd also say that the series occasionally strains credulity with some of its plot twists, and this for me came perilously close to breaking the willing suspension of disbelief by the time I got to Potsdam Station, which is why it only gets four stars. Still well worth reading this, and the series, on its own terms though -- I positively hated the choice Russell made at the conclusion, but I understood why he did it, and that is a pretty good result for character driven historical fiction (cf. Kerr's otherwise excellent Field Grey, where I still don't know what Bernie was bloody thinking at the end).
6 people found this helpful
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Series declines . . .

I eagerly awaited the publication of this fourth "station" book; I am disappointed. Downing demonstrated insight and originality in the first three books. The predicament faced by the American/English journalist with a German speaking son set the stage for an interesting account of pre-war Germany, but the fast forward in this book made it hard to relate to. As it stands, this is a disjointed, hard to follow, pale imitation of the previous "station" books. Short, very short choppy excerpts following the exploits of the three main characters does not a compelling novel make. This effort clearly needed the heavy hand of a confident editor to convince Downing to reorganize the novel's structure. As published, it just didn't work. As soon as you begin to relate to a characher and develop some empathy for his or her predicament, the book switches to one of the other leads. There are good passages here especially the descriptions of the Russian army's offensive as it circles and utlimately overtakes Berlin, but such accounts cannot overcome the fatal flaw of the book's truly disjointed structure. I paid good money for the hardback edition and I'm just so disenchanted. I expected more from this author who had created truly compelling characters in the previous "station" books.
5 people found this helpful
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the hero is a jerk

This series is interesting at first for the glimpes of Nazi Berlin geography, customs, society, and ambience, which seem for a while authentic, although his Nazis are stereotypes. When the series moves away from Berlin culture, and the weaknesses of the plots and characters move progressively to center stage, even the early authenticity comes into question.

And the hero is a total jerk. He grew up in England but has no loyalty and some contempt for that country. He uses an American passport, his mother is American, and he wants eventually to live in the US, but he has no loyalty, and some contempt for the US. He proclaims his atheism, but is eager to moralize when he gets a chance (for example, about capitalism). He doesn't like his fellow reporters much. He is positive only about communists; he acknowledges that communism flopped, but likes the idea. I ended up not caring what happened to him, and sometimes even pulling for the worst.

His girl friend is slightly better. She is an anti-Nazi German who has to deal with Berlin culture, and for some reason loves the jerk. Like the series, she is a lot better-looking at first than she is later.

I read every word of the first two, started skipping in the third, and mostly skipped through the last one ("Potsdam"). Glimpses of Nazi Berlin was a great idea, I love what there is about railroads, and the Adlon hotel is a fascinating setting for some scenes, but "The gentleman is a jerk."
4 people found this helpful
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Was this proof read?

Got it from Amazon; great service as usual. The book has many mistakes i.e. typos and refers to the US Army Air Corps as "USAF". The USAF didn't come into existence until 1947. What would it cost to have a military historian and/or an English teacher proof read a book, prior to asking $25.00 per copy? Shoddy.
4 people found this helpful
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Fascinating place and time too bad the book's not up to it

If you like Philip Kerr don't bother reading this series.
Prose reads like marketing material and whenever author Downing can't figure out how to add descriptive detail he slips in another reference to the protagonist, John Russel's car: a Hanomag. He's done his research, but can't stop trying to allude to the hypocrisy of American pre-1942-ambivalence to Germany that he sinks what might have otherwise been a Sidney Sheldon-esque tale sans bodice-ripping sex. Russell seems at best like an well-intentioned dreamer who left the US rather than accept the mediocre career prospects on offer. He's a friendless fellow but doesn't seem to have any skeletons in his closet or unsavory habits save his lack of humor. His courage lacks heart, it is strategic and evidenced only when his interests are threatened. His girlfriend seems a rather better sort, with convictions and the spirit to follow them through. It's hardly a surprise she seems always to be on the verge of giving Russell the heave-ho.
4 people found this helpful
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conveys the place and time

The reader new to Downing is definitely at a disadvantage with this sequel: there is so much back story. Never-the-less, I enjoyed it quite a bit. Set in Germany in the waning years of WWII, it ably conveys the place and time. It involves, without disturbing the reader (as a more ambitious novel might). It alternates between 3 narrators with 3 different stories, which ultimately converge. Occasionally, I thought Downing switched too quickly. One nice touch, is that amidst the dire events, Paul manages to feel everyday irritation about a child running alongside and shooting an imaginary gun as they pass (p.236).

An error: on one leg of the flight to Berlin, the four men on the mission fly on a small plane "which only had room for the four of them" (p.138). However, Nikoladze is still with them, see later paragraph, so there were five at this point. (I see other reviewers found other errors).
1 people found this helpful
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WW II

Tjhis was fascinating, Brought back memories of WW II even though was very young at the time. Was a look at the war from the other side. Loaned the book to a neighbor who was on the other side of the war, and they found it very depresssing and one could not read it.
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well researched and suspenseful

In the fourth novel featuring British American journalist Paul Russell, it's April 1945 (three years after the action of Stettin Station). The Russians are advancing across Germany towards Berlin, the Third Reich collapsing in their wake, rumors of atrocities flying before them.

Russell's son, Paul Gehrts, is now an 18-year old German soldier, alone in the world after his father's escape from Germany in 1941 and the death of his mother and stepfather in a car accident a year ago.

Now his last friends are dying all around him as his anti-tank unit attempts to stem the Russian tide until they run out of ammunition. Most days a "Fuhrer Order" arrives, assuring them the "turning point" of the war is near and depends on their continuing zeal.

Meanwhile, Effi Koenen, Russell's German movie actress fiancée, is living in Berlin, using her talents to fortify a false identity and help fugitives - many of them Jews - escape Germany. As the war enters its last days and the allies continue to bomb the city unmercifully, she's asked to take on one more responsibility: a 7-year-old Jewish girl, Rosa, whose mother has been killed.

Rosa soon finds a place in Effi's heart, so much so that she lets the child keep a blouse her mother made for her. A blouse with a telltale remnant of the Jewish star that was sewn onto it. Like the gun that shows up in a play's Act 1, the reader knows it's a matter of when, not whether, the garment will play a crucial part.

Russell, in complete ignorance of his family's fate, is desperate to reach Berlin and find Effi and Paul. Now a reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle, he approaches the Soviets and asks to enter Berlin with their army, offering his language skills and familiarity with the city as enticements.

But the Russians are not impressed until they come up with a scheme of their own, one that will make Russell a traitor, most likely a dead one. Russell seizes the chance, hoping to find a way out once he gets there.

As the three converge on Berlin in the violent death throes of a war that has whipped the Russian bear into a frenzy of revenge, the tension becomes breathtaking, the cruelties harrowing, and the humanity redeeming. Berlin is a terrifying place in all respects, from its fanatical Nazi remnants to the indiscriminate destruction of the bombs, and the triumphant Russians.

Well-researched and vivid, full of intrigue and danger, Downing's latest ratchets up the suspense without sacrificing the complexity of his characters. He explores the politics and schisms of the war as he tells the story, showing the inevitability of the divided world of the Cold War.

It is not necessary to have read the first three books, though readers may find themselves wanting to know what went before.
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Another Great Read by David Downing

I really can't say enough about how much I have enjoyed all the "Station" books by David Downing. His main characters are likable and are portrayed as people honestly coping with their circumstances. The main character, John Russell, is a half-English/half-American journalist who has spent most of his adult life in Berlin. He is intelligent and perceptive enough see the true realities (and shortcomings) of any one country's ideology as he struggles to protect himself, his loved ones, and others from the horrors of Nazi Germany, a country he has called home for years. His girlfriend, ex-wife, son, and best friend are German, and they all have their own issues in respect to what is occurring in their homeland. Russell understands the complexities of the times and seeks to survive without compromising human decency, although -- just as in real life -- there are risks taken and decisions made between the lesser of two evils. Potsdam Station and the three novels preceding it were difficult for me to put down. I read somewhere that Downing's next installment in this series, named "Lehter Station," is due for publication in May 2012 and will continue the story in the post-war environment. I certainly hope so!
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