Synopses & Reviews
As Europe prepares for the Nuremberg trials, a killer stalks a broken cityNuremberg is a dead city. In the aftermath of World War II, two-thirds of its population has fled or is deceased, with thirty thousand bodies turning the ruined industrial center into a massive open grave. Here, the vilest war criminals in history will be tried. But in Nuremberg’s dark streets and back alleys, chaos rules.
Captain Nathan Morgan is one of those charged with bringing order to the home of the war crime trials. A New York homicide detective who spent the war in Army intelligence, he was born to be a spy—and now, in 1945, there is no finer place for his trade than Nuremberg. As the US grapples with the Soviets for postwar supremacy, a serial murderer targets the occupying forces. Nathan Morgan may be the perfect spy, but it’s time for him to turn cop once more.
Review
<DIV>“Jones’ measured, stately prose is perfectly in tune with his period setting.” —<i>Kirkus Reviews</i> on <i>The Silence</i></div><DIV><BR>“An intricately plotted, gracefully written, and totally immersive read.” —<i>Library Journal</i> on <i>The Silence</i></div><DIV><BR>“[Jones] smoothly blends a compelling period whodunit with bountiful cultural and social details.” —<i>Publishers Weekly</i> on <i>Requiem in Vienna</i></div><DIV><BR>“Top-notch detecting and characterizations bolster the intricate plot.” —<i>Publishers Weekly</i> on <i>The Keeper of Hands</i></div>
Review
J. Sydney Jones (b. 1948) is an American author of fiction and nonfiction. Born in the United States, he studied abroad in Vienna in 1968 and later returned to Austria to live there for nearly two decades. In the late 1970s he began writing travel books, many of which concern central Europe, and published his first thriller,
Time of the Wolf, in 1990. In 2009 Jones published
The Empty Mirror, a mystery set in late-nineteenth-century Vienna that would become the first book in his Viennese Mystery series, of which the most recent installment is
The Keeper of Hands (2013). Jones lives with his wife and son in California. “Jones’ measured, stately prose is perfectly in tune with his period setting.” —
Kirkus Reviews on
The Silence“An intricately plotted, gracefully written, and totally immersive read.” —Library Journal on The Silence
“[Jones] smoothly blends a compelling period whodunit with bountiful cultural and social details.” —Publishers Weekly on Requiem in Vienna
“Top-notch detecting and characterizations bolster the intricate plot.” —Publishers Weekly on The Keeper of Hands
“Solid and suspenseful . . . A rich, powerful read . . . Fans of WWII mystery fiction should consider this one mandatory reading.” —Booklist
Synopsis
In 1945 Nuremberg, an American intelligence officer tracks a killer: "Powerful . . . Fans of WWII mystery fiction should consider this one mandatory reading" (Booklist).
Nuremberg is a dead city. In the aftermath of World War II, two-thirds of its population has fled or is deceased, with thirty thousand bodies turning the ruined industrial center into a massive open grave. Here, the vilest war criminals in history will be tried. But in Nuremberg's dark streets and back alleys, chaos rules.
Captain Nathan Morgan is one of those charged with bringing order to the home of the war crime trials. A New York homicide detective who spent the war in Army intelligence, he was born to be a spy--and now, in 1945, there is no finer place for his trade than Nuremberg. As the US grapples with the Soviets for postwar supremacy, a serial murderer targets the occupying forces. Nathan Morgan may be the perfect spy, but it's time for him to turn cop once more.