Audiobook12 hours
Children of Wrath
Written by Paul Grossman
Narrated by Kyle Munley
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
()
About this audiobook
On the same day that the stock market crashes in New York in 1929, the dark underside of Berlin flushes to the surface in the form of a burlap sack spewed by floodwaters from the city sewer system. What it contains calls Jewish Detective Willi Kraus to investigate perhaps the most vicious criminal heretofore known.
Author
Paul Grossman
Paul Grossman is a long time teacher of writing and literature at Hunter College. He is the author of The Sleepwalkers and Children of Wrath.
Related to Children of Wrath
Titles in the series (2)
The Sleepwalkers Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Children of Wrath Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for Children of Wrath
Rating: 3.5961538461538463 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
26 ratings7 reviews
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5The decadence and anti-Semitism of post-WWI Germany is not surprising and yet is appalling. It is a subject that is difficult to read. It is a subject that is impossible to enjoy. Woven into a mystery, my preferred genre, does not make it more palatable. 104
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This starts off on the right foot-- bag of mysterious bones washes up in the flood, with inscrutable Biblical passage marked. Willi Kraus on the case! Except . . . he's not. He's pulled off to investigate tainted sausages instead. At length. Many shades of The Jungle. And then he's back on the case again eventually which, no surprise here, links back to the slaughterhouses (coincidence! love it!). The novel moves somewhat slowly-- it is extremely precise in its historical accuraccy, but can get bogged down in detail-- every step Willi takes seems to have to be described at some length, and there are several tangents, plus several threads that get dropped altogether. I found the Epilogue rather unsatisfactory-- is this supposed to signal that the Willi Kraus series ends at two books? Better editing and a speeding up of pace could have improved a good idea for a serial killer mystery considerably; the core idea is good, it's just lacking in (pardon the pun) execution. Inevitable comparisons will be made to Philip Kerr-- don't expect Berlin Noir from Grossman, but do try to enjoy what he's produced on its own merits.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Children of Wrath. Paul Grossman. 2012. A few years ago, I downloaded this author’s first book, Sleepwalkers. Willie Kraus is a WWWI hero and police detective noted for his ability to solve serial murders in 1929 Berlin. That he is Jewish has never been a real problem but it slowly becomes one for him and for his family as he struggles to find out who is murdering children and using skin and bones for purses. There are lots of twists, turns and narrow misses in this investigation and in the slow persecution that Willie and his family begin to feel. I hope Grossman continues this series. It is a good one.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Where I got the book: review copy provided by the Historical Novel Society. This review first appeared on the HNS website.This thriller, set in Depression-era Berlin, is the prequel to the action in The Sleepwalkers and features a younger Willi Kraus, married and father to two young boys, trying to negotiate the demands of marriage and fatherhood while fending off the anti-Semitism rife in the Kripo, Berlin’s criminal investigation department. Kraus is furious when he is taken off a serial murder case and assigned to a seemingly mundane matter of tainted sausages, but the two investigations are horribly linked.The Children of Wrath contains many of the elements also found in The Sleepwalkers—the rise of the Nazi party, the decadence of 1930s Berlin and the strange cults and societies that flourished there—but Kraus’ relatively lowly position in the Criminal Police brings out the era’s pervasive anti-Semitism much more strongly as Kraus, who has an excellent war record and holds the prestigious Iron Cross, constantly has to prove himself in both his professional and his private life. Grossman endows Kraus with a dry sense of humor and a passion for justice that carry him well through the wide variety of settings and scenes afforded by a cosmopolitan city on the brink of economic disaster and political violence.Grossman’s writing has a European feel that lends a distinctive voice to his detective’s viewpoint. The plot is fast-paced and intriguing with some nicely gruesome touches, leading up to a page-turning climax. The somberly reflective ending suggests that no more Willi Kraus books will be forthcoming, and I think that’s a great shame. Grossman has imagined a character who both belongs intimately to his time and location and is set apart from it by the tragedy of his age, and the result is fascinating.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I got Paul Grossman's first book through Early Reviewers and was very excited for this one to be published. In addition to the mystery plot unfolding there is a second, equally fascinating story of the unfolding history of Germany in the 1930's. I will be happy to read more!
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This starts off on the right foot-- bag of mysterious bones washes up in the flood, with inscrutable Biblical passage marked. Willi Kraus on the case! Except . . . he's not. He's pulled off to investigate tainted sausages instead. At length. Many shades of The Jungle. And then he's back on the case again eventually which, no surprise here, links back to the slaughterhouses (coincidence! love it!). The novel moves somewhat slowly-- it is extremely precise in its historical accuraccy, but can get bogged down in detail-- every step Willi takes seems to have to be described at some length, and there are several tangents, plus several threads that get dropped altogether. I found the Epilogue rather unsatisfactory-- is this supposed to signal that the Willi Kraus series ends at two books? Better editing and a speeding up of pace could have improved a good idea for a serial killer mystery considerably; the core idea is good, it's just lacking in (pardon the pun) execution. Inevitable comparisons will be made to Philip Kerr-- don't expect Berlin Noir from Grossman, but do try to enjoy what he's produced on its own merits.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Willi Kraus is one of the few Jewish policmen in Berlin, post World War I. As such, he is treated as a kind of a third class citizen. After finding a bag of bones that are determined to be a bag of children's bones, he is determined to solve the case and bring and end to the wrath of the serial killer, Child Eater of Berlin. Willi finds obstacles at every turn but makes it his mission to solve the case, even if it means that his family is put in danger.