Death in Berlin explained

Death in Berlin
Title Orig:Death Walked in Berlin
Author:M. M. Kaye
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Genre:Mystery novel
Publisher:Staples Press
Release Date:1955

Death in Berlin published in 1955 (under the title Death Walked in Berlin[1]) is a mystery novel by M. M. Kaye. The story, set in early Cold War Berlin, prior to the erection of the Berlin Wall, focuses on Miranda Brand who goes on a one-month vacation to the divided German city. She is invited there by her cousin Robert, a British Army officer stationed in Berlin, and his wife Stella. On the way, Brigadier Brindley relates to a party of British officers and their families - among them Miranda - a WWII story of a fortune in lost diamonds, in which Miranda herself is revealed to be mysteriously involved. This mystery from the past turns out to have very sinister present day implications. Miranda's vacation becomes increasingly ominous, with murders following each other, first on the night train and then in Berlin itself. Much of Berlin is still in ruins, the Cold War is raging and Miranda happens to witness the handover of secret information by a spy. However, the Soviets are not the villains here. They are very much in the background, as are the German inhabitants of Berlin, struggling to rebuild their devastated city (the book has virtually no German characters, apart from domestic servants in British homes). Rather, the devastated Berlin of the early Cold War serves as the backdrop to the lethal jealousies and tensions rending the enclave of British military personnel, their wives and domestic servants. At the explosive ending, Miranda comes close to being murdered herself - by the most unlikely of all suspects.[2]

Characters

Author's personal background

As noted by the author in the foreword to the book, it was inspired by having actually spent time in Berlin as the wife of a British Army officer. The book's social milieu of Berlin-based British officers and their wives was thus quite familiar to her. A similar background is given in the foreword to other books entitled "Death in ...".

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.mmkaye.com/ReviewDIB.html Reviews of 'DEATH IN BERLIN'
  2. Book: M. M. Kaye

    . M. M. Kaye. M. M. Kaye. Death in Berlin. 1985. St. Martin's Press. United Kingdom. 0-312-26308-2.