The Arms Maker of Berlin [Dan Fesperman] on www.doorway.ru *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. The Arms Maker of Berlin. Turns out it was Dan Fesperman's latest thriller -- a book by an author I hadn't even heard of. The plot seemed intriguing enough, combining as it did a historical mystery revolving around the fate of a White Rose Nazi resistance cell in Berlin just after the fall of Stalingrad with the appearance of long-missing archival material about the OSS's wartime operations in Bern, just across the Swiss border/5(66). The Arms Maker of Berlin is a curious book. It’s essentially an Indiana Jones-style hunt for important historical documents, with a tangle of individuals and groups also after the prize. It’s a book that left me a little conflicted. It really shouldn’t have worked. The prose was workmanlike and sometimes clunky/5().
Dan Fesperman is the creator and writer of the Vlado Petric series of fictional novels. Lie in the Dark was the debut novel in this series and it came out in In , the sequel came out. It is titled The Small Boat of Great Sorrows. Dan Fesperman (born Septem in Charlotte, North Carolina) is a former reporter for The Baltimore Sun and the author of several thrillers. The plots were inspired by the author's own international assignments in Germany, Bosnia, Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Middle East. The Arms Maker of Berlin. Author Dan Fesperman: author of the literary thrillers The Letter Writer, Safe Houses, and more. NOVELS THE ARMS MAKER OF BERLIN. US edition. N at Turnbull, a history professor who specializes in the German resistance, is only mildly surprised when his estranged mentor, Gordon Wolfe, is arrested for possession of stolen World War II archives.
THE ARMS MAKER OF BERLIN. by Dan Fesperman. BUY NOW FROM. AMAZON. BARNES NOBLE. LOCAL BOOKSELLER. Overview. An unflinching thriller from Dan Fesperman that takes us deep into the White Rose resistance movement during World War II. When Nat Turnbull’s mentor, Gordon Wolfe, is arrested for possession of a missing WWII secret service archive and then turns up dead in jail, Nat’s quiet academic life is suddenly thrown into tumult. Turns out it was Dan Fesperman's latest thriller -- a book by an author I hadn't even heard of. The plot seemed intriguing enough, combining as it did a historical mystery revolving around the fate of a White Rose Nazi resistance cell in Berlin just after the fall of Stalingrad with the appearance of long-missing archival material about the OSS's wartime operations in Bern, just across the Swiss border.
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