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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
An intriguing alternate history of the U.S. under Nazi rule,
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This review is from: Budspy (Hardcover)
Budspy is a novel of an alternate history where the Nazis have won World War 2. Chic Western is the son of Jewish parents killed in the Holocaust. Intrigued by his difference from other students, the American Secret Ombudsmen Commission recruits him and so he becomes a `budspy,' moving from job to job and reporting on unpatriotic co-workers.
Six years after working in the Untied States, he is assigned to the American Embassy in Germany to investigate a report on an intelligence leak to the Soviets. He begins a liaison with a fellow Embassy worker who unknowingly leads the budspy to the source of the Intelligence leak: a resistance group. In the Embassy he discovers a letter revealing how Hitler's advisers planed his death by encouraging him to go to the Soviet front, where he is killed during a surprise attack. The new leaders of the Nazis then coerce the Allies into surrender. This story is very educational and suspenseful. It explores how life might be, with America's independence lost, and the ensuring system of oppression and collaboration under a Nazi regime.
3.0 out of 5 stars
An intriguing setting marred by a clumsy plot,
By
This review is from: Budspy (Hardcover)
Chameleon is the word that best describes Chic Western, an operative or "budman" for an elite U.S. internal security organization known as the Ombudsman Commission. Fresh from his most recent assignment, Western is sent undercover to Germany to ferret out a staffer in the U.S. Embassy who is leaking secrets to the dying insurgency in the remnants of the Soviet Union. There he experiences the wonders of a dynamic Third Reich forty years after the Second World War, a land of vibrant people and great material comfort. Yet as Western explores further, he begins to encounter the dark side of this supposedly perfect world, leading him to consider disturbing questions that ultimately lead him to a determined conclusion.
David Dvorkin's novel offers an intriguing portrait of an alternate Third Reich. Positing a successful plot to eliminate Adolf Hitler in 1942, he goes on to depict an empire of success and progress, one in which the guilt over the Holocaust is assuaged by the creation of a Jewish state. Equally interesting is the comparisons his character continually makes of a grim, repressive America, where a police state keeps a tight lid on racial tensions. Yet the novel is marred by a rather clumsy plot. For a supposedly elite agent, his central character seems anything but, being all too causal with his cover identity and ignoring some obvious clues from the start. It is as if all Dvorkin's energy went into developing his premise and settings, with the actual story itself developed as an afterthought. This mars what is otherwise an enjoyable presentation of an alternate world that avoids the typical dystopian stereotypes in favor of a more subtle depiction of evil. |
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Budspy by David Dvorkin (Paperback - February 4, 2003)
Used & New from: $9.88
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