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The Time of the Assassins by Godfrey Blunden is a gripping historical novel set against the backdrop of Nazi-occupied Ukraine during World War II. Through the eyes of various characters, the truly nightmarish aspect of the experience of a terrorist war between the NKVD and the Nazi SS is explored through themes of fear, betrayal, and moral compromise. As the protagonist becomes entangled in the lives of resistance fighters, collaborators, and ordinary citizens struggling to survive, he is forced to confront the harsh realities of occupation and the moral ambiguities of wartime choices. There…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The Time of the Assassins by Godfrey Blunden is a gripping historical novel set against the backdrop of Nazi-occupied Ukraine during World War II. Through the eyes of various characters, the truly nightmarish aspect of the experience of a terrorist war between the NKVD and the Nazi SS is explored through themes of fear, betrayal, and moral compromise. As the protagonist becomes entangled in the lives of resistance fighters, collaborators, and ordinary citizens struggling to survive, he is forced to confront the harsh realities of occupation and the moral ambiguities of wartime choices. There was no safe situation in this scenario: side with either the Soviets or the Germans and you risked being killed as the other's enemy. Attempt to remain neutral and focus on surviving, and you risked being wiped out by either side's blind adherence to its ideology. Blunden's masterful storytelling and keen psychological insight make The Time of the Assassins a haunting meditation on human resilience and the complexities of loyalty in an era of unprecedented brutality. The Time of the Assassins is more a matter of reporting than of invention. Mr. Blunden was in Russia during the war, and he was one of the correspondents who entered Kharkov soon after it was first retaken from the Germans. From the things he saw and heard among the ruins, and the things he learned later, he has constructed a convincing account of what happened in the town.
Autorenporträt
Godfrey Blunden (1906-1996) was an Australian journalist and author.While he was a journalist in Sydney in the early 1930s he wrote his first novel No More Reality published in 1935. Employed by the Sydney Daily Telegraph Blunden was sent to England in 1941 and covered the Battle of Britain, before travelling in 1942 to the Soviet Union, where he covered fighting in the Stalingrad (Volgograd) and Kharkov (Kharkiv) fronts. His dispatches were also published in the London Evening Standard.He was one of the few western reporters to witness and report on the Battle of Stalingrad, which ended with the surrender of German forces in the city in February 1943, as well as subsequent fighting around Kharkov and Rzhev.