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Review: Leaving Berlin

Kanon's latest is set in Berlin in 1948, at the time of the Berlin Airlift and the escalation of the Cold War.

March 5, 2015 14:53
Berlin children watch an Allied plane approach as  part of the 1948 airlift

By

David Herman,

David Herman

2 min read

By Joseph Kanon
Simon & Schuster, £12.99

Joseph Kanon has written six novels, all set in the dark years following 1945, and taking a real event - the Potsdam Conference, the Manhattan Project - as the background for a murder case.

Leaving Berlin, Kanon's latest, is set in Berlin in 1948, at the time of the Berlin Airlift and the escalation of the Cold War. The central character is Alex Meier, a Jewish writer, who fled Nazi Germany for America before the war.

Meier gets caught up in the McCarthy witch-hunt and, faced with deportation, he makes a deal with US intelligence. He will return to Soviet-occupied Berlin as an American secret agent and, if he does a good job, he will be allowed to return to the States, and his beloved son Peter.