Search This Blog

Tuesday, July 03, 2012

Istanbul Passage by Joseph Kanon

Istanbul Passage  evokes the atmosphere of late 1945, shortly after the end of the war.  During the war Istanbul remained neutral, and spies from all sides gathered there, but at the time the novel takes place most have departed.

Which is not to mean that unusual machinations had ceased.  Istanbul served as a kind of way station in the efforts to aid Jewish refugees in their efforts to reach Palestine.

After the war millions of displaced Jews who had survived the Nazi regime sought refuge in the newly established Jewish state.  The British had set up quotas that were minuscule to the numbers of survivors seeking to enter.  The story involves not only the smuggling of Jews into Palestine, avoiding the British blockade, but also the effort to smuggle a notorious Nazi collaborator to the U.S.    

Leon Baur finds himself caught up in a number of deceptions that threaten his ethics, his life, and his livelihood.  

Guilt, love, deception, and ethical questions abound in this story of a turbulent time; Leon Baur's difficulties mirror, in a way, the larger difficulties of nations.  Tense drama and great characterization.

Joseph Kanon's novels include Los Alamos (received an Edgar for Best First Novel) and The Good German (made into a film with George Clooney and Cate Blanchett).

I found the novel interesting on a number of levels and thoroughly enjoyed it.

This one was from Net Galley.

Fiction.  Suspense.  2012.  print version -  416 pages.

5 comments:

  1. Sounds like one I might like. Thanks, Jennie. TERESA

    ReplyDelete
  2. Teresa - I found myself wanting to read some of Kanon's other novels. I've not seen The Good German, but might watch it on Hulu or Netflix.

    ReplyDelete
  3. sounds interesting. I like the time frame, so will add it to my wish list. :)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anne - It was an interesting book, and I'm grateful to have had it from Net Galley, as I might not have read it otherwise. :)

    Kelly - I love this time frame, too. I'm reading another great one about WWII - The Secret Lives of Code Breakers - nonfiction about Bletchley Park and the Enigma machine codes. It is fantastic!

    ReplyDelete