The Holcroft Covenant Explained

The Holcroft Covenant
Author:Robert Ludlum
Cover Artist:John Knights
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Genre:Espionage
Publisher:Granada (UK)
Richard Marek (US)
Pub Date:July 27, 1978
Media Type:Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages:494 pp (first edition)
Isbn:0-246-11048-1
Oclc:59182171

The Holcroft Covenant is a 1978 thriller novel by Robert Ludlum. In 1985 it was made into a film of the same name.[1]

Plot

The novel concerns Noel Holcroft, New York City architect and secretly the son of Heinrich Clausen, chief economic adviser to the Third Reich. At some point in the 1970s, Holcroft is contacted by the Grande Banque de Geneve, concerning his father's will and testament. The testament says that in the last half of the war, Clausen found out about the Holocaust. Horrified and desperate to make amends, he and his two friends stole vast amounts of money from thousands of individual sources throughout the Reich and funneled them into a secure account in Zurich, Switzerland. Now, if Holcroft will contact the children of the two friends, they can form a group to distribute the funds and alleviate some of the pain of the Holocaust.

Ranged against him in this noble endeavor is the last trace of the Third Reich: the children of Projekt Sonnenkinder. In the dying days of the war, a vast search went out throughout Germany. The children of Germany's finest, those without physical and psychological frailties, were sent to isolated hamlets all over the world by airplane and U-boat. They were raised, provided for, and indoctrinated. Those who showed promise were inducted into the conspiracy by their elders; those that weren't were "removed." They have waited thirty years for the funds so as to finally take over the world. Their leader, the Tinamou, is the world's deadliest assassin.

As Holcroft attempts to carry out what he believes to be the noble, secret mission of his biological father, he is continuously blindsided as good guys turn out to be bad guys, bad guys turn out to be good guys, and Holcroft, who has no training whatsoever in intelligence and espionage, is forced to learn on the job.

Background

Ludlum says the novel was inspired by a "what if" question. "What if Nazi children at the end of World War Two were being saved so that in the next generation they could revive the Third Reich? British intelligence had traced down the rumour and found it false. But that didn't stop me spinning it out into a story. You can call me a paranoiac if you like. But what I basically am is a skeptic."[2]

Reception

The Los Angeles Times called it a "rivetting, suspense-filled read."[3] The novel was a best seller.[4]

Publication history

Notes and References

  1. "Books of The Times: The Real Purpose Murder in Amsterdam" By John Leonard. New York Times 13 Mar 1978: C19.
  2. "BEHIND THE BEST SELLERS: Robert Ludlum" By Herbert Mitgang. New York Times 6 Apr 1978: 272.
  3. "Another digger in the mother lode of villainy" Shaw, David. Los Angeles Times 2 Apr 1978: l4.
  4. "The secret life of Robert Ludlum" The Guardian 6 Jan 1979: 11.