![]() ![]() (BTW, these were all considered compliments.)Īs the story of the assassination attempt - and its devastating aftermath - unfolds, the narrator name-drops specific streets, museums, restaurants, squares, and parks in Prague that bring us into the heart of the action. Binet digs into Heydrich’s history, trying to understand what lead him to become the man known as the Butcher of Prague, the Hangman of Prague, the Blond Beast, and - Hitler’s nickname for him - The Man with the Iron Heart. He was held up as an example of the Aryan ideal: tall, blonde, quite clever, and very, very cruel. Sadly, it’s impossible to tell the story of heroes without spending time with the villain - and Binet paints a vivid picture of Heydrich. ![]() ![]() ![]() In 1942, they were assigned to parachute into Czechoslovakia, make their way to Prague, and bring a well-deserved reckoning to Reinhard Heydrich. The story is meant to honor two heroes of Czechoslovakia: Jozef Gabčik, a Slovak factory worker, and Jan Kubiš, a Czech soldier. As the first-person narrator says early in the book: ‘Inventing a character in order to understand historical facts is like fabricating evidence.’ The events and the characters in this novel are all true to life. We could summarize this book by saying, ‘This is historical fiction about the assassination of the Nazi Reinhard Heidrich in Prague during WWII.’ But that doesn’t come anywhere close to describing what’s it’s really about. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |