From Publishers Weekly
Set in 1923, Satterthwait's third mystery featuring Pinkerton agents Jane Turner and Phil Beaumont doesn't work as well as its predecessors (Escapade and Masquerade), in part because the subject matter, an investigation into a failed attempt on the life of a young Adolf Hitler, clashes with Beaumont's witty asides and the burgeoning romance between the two sleuths. The couple travel to Germany after a shot is fired at Hitler during a clandestine meeting between the Nazi leader and a prominent army figure in Berlin, but the myriad plots and counterplots, as well as the official police inquiry, only muddy the waters. Turner finds herself falling for a purported psychic, while Nazi Party figures bombard Beaumont with evidence pointing to a Communist plot. Despite the impressive history reading list Satterthwait cites in the acknowledgments, his Führer is underdeveloped and too close to a caricature. The solution comes as an anticlimactic afterthought. (Those seeking a better-plotted and more atmospheric mystery involving Nazis should seek out Darwin Teilhet's gripping The Talking Sparrow Murders.) Though Turner is less well-developed than her partner, they make an engaging pair who would be better served by a return to adventures with historical figures such as Hemingway and Houdini. (Feb. 10)Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Book Description
Pinkerton agents Jane Turner and Philip Beaumont have just finished another difficult assignment abroad; now the office is sending them to Germany. Their job: to find the assassin who almost succeeded in killing Adolf Hitler when he was in Berlin.
Their first surprise is a pleasant one---the Nazi big shot assigned to be their guide, Ernst (Putzi) Hanfstaengl, is a huge, jovial man who amazes his guests immediately; his English is almost without any accent! Hanfstaengl has learned American ways during his student days at Harvard. He is a talented pianist and as friendly as a puppy. Jane and Phil have no reason to think his fellow Nazis are not just as personable. This isn't going to be so bad.
Everything starts to go downhill after that, however, although a handsome Nazi almost turns Jane's head with his attentions. Their job becomes a questionable one as the agents see more and more of the new party's dreadful face. A woman who gives them some information is found murdered. There are other deaths, all clearly connected to the Nazi Party. By the time Jane and Phil meet Hitler, they are not only horrified and puzzled about why the Pinkerton agency accepted the job, they are very aware that they are in danger themselves.
Walter Satterthwait has uncannily taken his readers to the Germany of 1923, introducing them to characters from the actual front pages of the period's newspapers---Hanfstaengl, Rudolf Hess, and many others. As in the previous two books of this series, the crimes that Turner and Beaumont encounter are committed against a genuinely historical background. It all adds up to a suspenseful story of two likable people at risk in the treacherous atmosphere of Germany's postwar nightmare.
About the Author
Walter Satterthwait has lived in New York and Portland, Oregon, as well as Africa, Thailand, Greece, the Netherlands, England, and France. He has worked at everything from restaurant manager and bartender to encyclopedia salesman. He is the author of numerous works of fiction, several of which bring the recent past to life. He is also the author of a series featuring Santa Fe detectives Joshua Croft and Rita Mondragon, the first of which was nominated for a Shamus Award by the Private Eye Writers of America. Escapade, the initial story of the Pinkerton agents, won the French Prix du Roman d'Aventures. Satterthwait now lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Cavalcade FROM THE PUBLISHER
"Pinkerton Agents Jane Turner and Philip Beaumont have just finished another difficult assignment abroad; now the office is sending them to Germany. Their job: to find the assassin who almost succeeded in killing Adolf Hitler when he was in Berlin." "Their first surprise is a pleasant one - the Nazi big shot assigned to be their guide, Ernst "Putzi" Hanfstaengl, is a huge, jovial man who amazes his guests immediately; his English is almost without any accent! Putzi is as friendly as a puppy, and Jane and Phil have no reason to think his fellow Nazis are not just as personable." "Everything starts to go downhill after that, however. Their job becomes a questionable one as the agents see more and more of the new party's dreadful face. A woman who gives them some information is found murdered. There are other deaths, all clearly connected to the Nazi Party. By the time Jane and Phil meet Hitler, they are very aware that they are in danger themselves." Walter Satterthwait has taken his readers to the Germany of 1923, introducing them to characters from the actual front pages of the period. The crimes that Turner and Beaumont encounter are committed against a genuinely historical background.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
Set in 1923, Satterthwait's third mystery featuring Pinkerton agents Jane Turner and Phil Beaumont doesn't work as well as its predecessors (Escapade and Masquerade), in part because the subject matter, an investigation into a failed attempt on the life of a young Adolf Hitler, clashes with Beaumont's witty asides and the burgeoning romance between the two sleuths. The couple travel to Germany after a shot is fired at Hitler during a clandestine meeting between the Nazi leader and a prominent army figure in Berlin, but the myriad plots and counterplots, as well as the official police inquiry, only muddy the waters. Turner finds herself falling for a purported psychic, while Nazi Party figures bombard Beaumont with evidence pointing to a Communist plot. Despite the impressive history reading list Satterthwait cites in the acknowledgments, his F hrer is underdeveloped and too close to a caricature. The solution comes as an anticlimactic afterthought. (Those seeking a better-plotted and more atmospheric mystery involving Nazis should seek out Darwin Teilhet's gripping The Talking Sparrow Murders.) Though Turner is less well-developed than her partner, they make an engaging pair who would be better served by a return to adventures with historical figures such as Hemingway and Houdini. (Feb. 10) FYI: Satterthwait has won both Shamus and Agatha Awards. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
News flash: Even back in 1923, somebody disliked Adolf Hitler enough to take a shot at him. Stung by the threat to their charismatic leader, the National Socialist Workers' Party hires the Pinkerton Agency to identify the would-be assassin and turn him over to the Nazis instead of the police. Arriving from London, Phil Beaumont and Jane Turner (Masquerade, 1998, etc.) face daunting obstacles. The Party's top brass aren't eager to talk to anybody, even the agents hired to catch the shooter. Nor do they seem sufficiently alarmed to divert their attention from infighting, shadowing Jane and Phil and visiting sex clubs. Under the pretense of questioning the future Fuhrer's intimates, Mr. Beaumont and Miss Turner, decorously refraining from on-the-job romance, journey from Berlin to Bayreuth to Munich. Along a road that seems longer than the Thousand-Year Reich, they hit all the most decadent Weimar high spots, get news of the requisite celebrities (Greta Garbo, Marlene Dietrich and Albert Einstein, "a really great fella") and learn to their horror that Hitler is anti-Semitic, drunk with power and fond of being dominated by attractive young ladies. The story, smoothly unfolding in Phil's wisecracking narrative and Jane's breathless letters home, provides a couple of more successful murders, but except for the edifying tableau of Hitler begging to be ordered around, there's not much new. As for the question of who shot at Hitler, don't worry. It couldn't matter less.