A truth to lie for

Anne Perry

Book - 2022

"A lethal new weapon endangers all of Europe--unless Elena Standish can rescue an ingenious scientist from Hitler's clutches--in this action-packed mystery by bestselling author Anne Perry. It is summer 1934, and Hitler is teetering on the edge of supreme power. Any small step forward could vault him toward European domination. When Britain's MI6 gets word that a pair of German scientists have made a breakthrough in germ warfare, they send Elena Standish on a dangerous mission to get one of them out of Germany before he's forced to share his knowledge and its devastating power with Hitler's elite. But the British soon learn that it's more than just time that Elena is working against. The new head of Germany...9;s germ warfare division is an old enemy of Elena's grandfather Lucas, the former head of MI6. And he's bent on using any means to avenge his defeat at Lucas's hands twenty years before. What starts as an effort to save Europe from the devastation of disease soon becomes an intensely personal fight. As Elena and the scientist make their way across Germany, from Berlin to Bavaria and beyond, they confront not only the Gestapo but also a ragtag group of unpredictable Nazi supporters. With Elena's every decision challenged, this compelling mystery takes a searing look at what it means to do what's right in a world rife with so much evil"--

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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Spy fiction
Historical fiction
Novels
Romans
Published
New York : Ballantine Books [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Anne Perry (author)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Item Description
Originally published in the United Kingdom by Headline Publishing Group, London, in 2022.
Physical Description
269 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780593359075
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Octogenarian Perry continues to produce quality historical fiction, and her latest, featuring British MI6 agent Elena Standish, is another winner. It's the beginning of WWII, and Elena's mission is to go to Berlin and extract a German scientist who's working on Hitler's germ-warfare program, which could produce a powerful war weapon for Hitler and be a catastrophe for the British if it's unleashed. But as soon as Elena reaches Berlin, things begin to go wrong, and it's only with the help of her American journalist friend, Jacob, and through her own ingenuity that she's able to avoid capture by the Gestapo. In a parallel thread, German lawyer Hans Beckendorff has been recruited into the Gestapo and assigned to General Paulus, a powerful and thoroughly despicable man. But with Paulus' support, Hans can rise quickly, fulfil his parents' ambitions, and protect his wife and new baby daughter. When he's forced to make a terrible moral choice, will he opt for a decision that will keep him in Hitler's favor, or will he choose what he knows is right? A riveting tale for devotees of wartime espionage.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Set in 1934, bestseller Perry's underwhelming fourth novel featuring photographer turned spy Elena Standish (after 2021's A Darker Reality) finds Elena tapped by Peter Howard, her boss at MI6, for a vital mission. Howard plans to smuggle two German biochemists involved in creating a deadly bioweapon and its antidote out of Germany and bring them to England. Elena is to travel to Berlin to exfiltrate one of them. Though the Germans are aware that the biochemists' research is known to MI6, illogically they don't expect an effort by the Brits to either extract or kill them. Sections focused on the vicissitudes of Elena's assignment alternate with the actions of a morally conflicted Nazi, a clichéd secondary character with whom the reader spends too much time. Having the potential use of an atomic bomb briefly discussed in 1934 by Elena and Howard is also a jarring anachronism, given that nuclear fission had not yet been discovered. The combination of thin characters, plot contrivances, and not sweating the details makes for a forgettable outing. Perry is capable of better. Agent: Donald Maass, Donald Maass Literary. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

With Hitler striding toward power in 1934, photographer-turned-spy Elena Standish is sent to Germany to extricate a scientist who's made a significant breakthrough in germ warfare before he's forced to share his knowledge with the Nazis. Alas, the head of Germany's germ warfare division is making things difficult; he's an old enemy of Elena's grandfather Lucas, the former head of MI6, and is out for revenge. Following the LJ-starred A Darker Reality.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

CHAPTER 1 "I believe you have been complaining recently that your work is not challenging enough." Peter Howard raised his eyebrows very slightly. In the sunlight through the office window, he looked amused rather than surprised. Elena drew in a breath, then slowly let it out again. "Yes," she said. She had been recruited to MI6 by Peter just over a year ago, in May 1933. Now, in June 1934, he was her mentor, and her commanding officer. "I'm doing what any halfway competent clerk would do just as well," she added. A flash of amusement lit his face. "Then you will be pleased that I have a job for you that will require all your talents and abilities. Well, except photography." Photography was Elena's profession, her art, and her passport to all kinds of places and situations. It was her expertise as a photographer that had resulted in her invitation to a conference in Trieste, where she had also succeeded in her first official MI6 assignment. And more recently, her photographic skills had added so much to her family's celebration in Washington, DC--and ultimately led her to solve two murders. But she did not want to think about that now. It had been less than two months since the incidents in Washington, which had involved her grandfather, and which had ended so terribly. The pain was still raw for both of her parents, but especially her mother. Elena had hardly known her American grandfather, whereas she had a close and loving relationship with Grandfather Lucas, the former head of MI6. Peter was talking, and she had not been listening. ". . . Berlin again," he was saying. "You must not be recognized, Elena. This is not an order--the mission is too dangerous for that--but it is a request that you cannot refuse." The irony of the distinction was not lost on her. "We're sending another person as well, but you will not meet. Nor will you contact each other unless it is absolutely necessary." What had she missed? The humor of a few moments ago had vanished. Peter was no longer smiling but squinting as he looked past her, as if he saw something threatening approaching from far off, something that was crowding out everything else. He must have observed her confusion, because a gentleness appeared in his face. Not just in his eyes, but in his mouth as well. "What is it?" she asked as politely as she could. Now fear brushed by her. She waited, as if for the blow. "I want you to get someone out of Germany who is currently in Berlin." She knew he would read the fear in her face, and yet she could not hide it. That first assignment in Berlin had marked the moment she had changed from a naïve--and frankly fairly boring--girl into a young woman of courage and imagination. A woman who expressed a passionate anger against the indifference of those who saw only what they chose to, which was primarily what fitted in their comfortable lives. Her throat was dry. "Berlin?" She only just managed to get the word out. "Yes," he said, watching her reactions. "There are two scientists we need to get out of the country." "Physicists?" she asked, remembering her last mission, also one she had not chosen, but which had been thrust upon her. "No, this time they are biochemists," he replied. "Two brilliant men. They form a research team, and the work of one depends on the other." She remained silent, knowing that Peter would tell her only what she needed to know. "One of them is creating new germs to be used in warfare, while we believe the other is on the brink of finding an antidote to those same germs, which is vital, of course, before using them against anyone." He was still watching her intently. "You were a child during the last war," he continued, "but you have learned enough about the use of gas in the trenches to imagine what germ warfare can be. What it can do, not only to armies, but to entire civilian populations, is--" "Yes," she said sharply, cutting him off. The thought was obscene. "What do I have to do?" "We're going to get these two men out of Germany. The extraction of one of them is your task. We'll send another agent, Alex Cooper, for the other." "Why?" The word was out before she thought that perhaps she was asking for more information than she needed. Peter's smile was bleak and there was a flicker of pain in it. "Because it's vital that we get both of them out. And if they leave separately, there's a better chance that they will survive. It causes less suspicion." Elena was paying close attention. The last thing they wanted was to allow Germany and Adolf Hitler to have the upper hand in germ warfare! "The Germans know that we're aware of this research," Peter continued. "And if they discover that we are planning to extract their scientists, they will make every attempt to keep these two men in a secure location, hiding them until their work is done." After a pause, he added, "And then they will kill them so they don't take their knowledge elsewhere. We need to get them out before this happens." He stopped. There was a rigidity in his body, even his face. Elena knew that he hated having to say this, but he also knew that she needed the truth. "It will be your job to get Professor Heinrich Hartwig out of Berlin. Cooper will go after the other scientist, Fassler, who, at this time, is not your concern. You need only focus on Hartwig." She was certain there was more, and she waited. It was not long in coming. "Elena, you need to understand. Fassler is vital to their germ warfare plans, but he's a Jew. The minute he delivers, he's dead. He knows this." Peter paused. "Both men are prepared to leave Germany immediately. Hartwig and Fassler are research associates, the Germans' top team in their field. They don't work together, or even in the same lab, but their work is complementary. One man's work is incomplete without the other's. Hartwig is developing an antidote to the germ. You can't use this stuff at all until you have a sure protection against it for your own population. If we only get Hartwig out and not Fassler, we will at least have the antidote ourselves. But Germany will still develop the germ. And then they will find someone else who will ultimately develop a vaccine against it." "And Hartwig is willing to sacrifice his entire life in order to work in tandem with Fassler?" she asked. "Has Fassler no loyalty to humanity, if nothing else? What on earth does he believe in? Hitler?" "I don't believe either of them cares about politics one way or the other. They care about knowledge, science, and medicine. But it's more than that," Peter explained. "Hartwig is a widower, no children, his life is his work. And he sees where Germany is heading. This is not a sacrifice for him; it's a necessity. Fassler? I know less about him." "Peter--" she began, but was cut off. "They both need to get out quickly, while they can," Peter insisted. "The Germans undoubtedly know that any of their enemies will try to lure these men out." His voice was firm, leaving no room for discussion. "But you said that others would just take their places?" Elena asked. "For some of the work, of course. Not for the creative genius. That's all you need to know." Elena saw this as a polite way of reminding her how dangerous this mission would be. If she was caught, as long as she did not have certain knowledge, no threat, no torture in the world, could make her tell. Peter moved a little toward the window and, in a trick of the light, the shadows vanished from his face. When he spoke, his voice was lower, harsher. "The Nazis are persecuting the Jews even more appallingly than when you were there a year ago." "Worse than last year?" she asked incredulously, memory scorching her. "I saw a young man on the kitchen table of the people who took me in. The Brownshirts had flayed the skin from half his body. I don't even know if they managed to save him. I can't imagine the persecution being worse than that." He looked at her steadily. Seconds ticked by. "Do you want me to send someone else?" His voice was not critical, just disappointed. "No, of course not." She forced herself to say it, before she had time to consider whether it was really what she meant. But what a heavy burden! She was sure there was much he wasn't telling her, but she knew he was protecting her. Her grandfather Lucas would not have told her everything either. He had been protecting her from all sorts of pain for as long as she could remember, far back into childhood. Her memories of him had been of safety, discovery, of long conversations about all kinds of things: the ultimate friendship. She could remember weeding the garden with him, the immeasurable happiness of thinking she was helping. The memory was still so clear, and yet she had been only about three years old. Excerpted from A Truth to Lie For: An Elena Standish Novel by Anne Perry All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.