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A Brief Look at Fatherland, a What-if Novel that Portrays a Victorious Third Reich

Robert Harris' First Novel Features a Crisp Narrative, Wonderful Blend of Fact and Speculation

By Alex Diaz-Granados, published Feb 24, 2006
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Rating: 3.2 of 5
Berlin, 1964.

20 years have passed since Germany's victory over the Allies in World War II. Adolf Hitler has been in power for 31 years, his 75th birthday nears, and a summit meeting between the Fuhrer and President Kennedy has been announced.

This is the intriguing scenario presented by British journalist-novelist Robert Harris in his first novel, Fatherland.

Harris' novel, unlike Peter Tsouras' Disaster at D-Day: The Germans Defeat the Allies, June 1944, doesn't offer us a very detailed "alternative history" of the Second World War, which perhaps would have been the easy way out for a lesser writer. Instead, Harris smartly teases us with little glimpses at how Germany could have won the war while still losing its collective soul.

Fatherland's plot revolves around Xavier March, a former U-boat skipper who has joined the German police, which has been under SS control since the mid-1930s. On a rainy April morning, March has been called to investigate what seems to be a routine incident: a corpse has been found in the Havel River near the area where high Nazi party officials have their mansions.

Of course, if you have read political-police thrillers such as Gorky Park or Archangel, you know there will be nothing routine about this investigation. For this corpse's identity is none other than Doctor Josef Buhler, one of the earliest Nazi party members and former state secretary in the General Government, the part of Poland directly annexed by the Third Reich during the war. Before long, March (who is not a Nazi party member, just a dogged investigator) will follow Buhler's seemingly routine death down a dark and winding path that will lead him to Germany's darkest and best kept secret of all.

Takeaways
  • Alternate history depicts Nazi Germany in 1964
  • Harris' Third Reich would have been in a Cold War with US, bogged down in USSR
  • Harris is a renowned British journalist and novelist
Did You Know?
In the novel, the real-life 1960s aren't totally ignored; Germany's war in Russia is an allusion to the Vietnam War, and the Beatles are briefly and subtly mentioned.
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Considering all the revisionists trying to negate the occurrence of the Holocaust this book is disturbing. But I doubt feminism would have risen enough for their to be a woman journalist like this. Germany was too top-heavy and would have fallen like Rome anyway.

Posted on 01/25/2007 at 2:01:00 PM

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