An epistolatory novel about the friendship between an American Jew, Max, and a German, Martin. As Hitler rises to power, their relationship sours, in some expected ways and some less expected, as their characters are revealed.

Very short, very powerful, very technically skilled, a quick easy read with an unexpected and unforgettable outcome. Seriously, don't click on spoilers if there's any chance you'll read the book. That being said, I read it because Naomi Kritzer told me the whole story and it was still great. Thanks for the rec!

The book was published in 1939 under a male-sounding pseudonym, but the style feels almost modern and the themes feel incredibly modern. There's an afterword about what inspired the book, which which is worth reading. Taylor had some German friends who seemed like kind, wonderful people, who became fervent Nazis and abandoned their Jewish friends. In a question so many of us are asking now, she wondered, What changed their hearts so? What steps brought them to such cruelty?



It is not surprising that Martin reveals his anti-Semitism, first in minor ways ("You're one of the good ones") and then horrifically. What is surprising is how Max arranges his downfall long-distance, in a manner both clever and darkly funny, by sending him letters that appear to be in code, concluding with "The God of Moses be at your right hand."
osprey_archer: (Default)

From: [personal profile] osprey_archer


I read this book a few years ago and it packs SUCH a punch. The slow descent that becomes very quickly a fast descent - gur cneg jurer Znegva fraqf Znk n yratgul naq frys-whfgvslvat yrggre nobhg jul ur qvqa'g uryc Znk'f fvfgre (Znegva'f sbezre ybire!) jura fur fubjrq hc ng uvf qbbe ba gur eha sebz gur Trfgncb. Whfg gur gbgny frys-nofbecgvba bs jevgvat guvf frys-cvglvat "naq gung'f jul V yrg gur Trfgncb gnxr lbhe fvfgre" yrggre. Gurer'f n pregnva cbrgvp whfgvpr (nf jryy nf qnex uhzbe) va gur snpg gung Znk va erghea hfrf yrggref gb neenatr Znegva'f qbjasnyy.
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