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Malia's Reviews > Munich

Munich by Robert   Harris
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it was amazing
bookshelves: mystery-suspense, historical-fiction, best-of-2017
Read 2 times. Last read November 7, 2017 to November 12, 2017.

Robert Harris is one of my favorite authors of historical fiction, and he has another winner on his hands with Munich. It tells the story of two men, one German and one English, who play roles in the final meeting between Chamberlain and Hitler in 1938, when peace was still a possibility. The book is wonderfully written and researched and, as always with this author's books, I came away from it feeling I had learned something new. The characters are intriguing and the plot clever and well-paced. The only downside is that, of course, I knew all the while the outcome of the story. It is difficult to read about a meeting that could have changed history so monumentally, if Hitler had been a man with whom one could have reasoned. I don't know what could have been done to prevent Hitler and his madness at this stage, when he had the support of so many people behind him even though he made no secret of his intentions. There is a moment in the book when one of the characters is alone with Hitler just for a moment and the thought crosses his mind that he could kill him, but of course he doesn't in the end. He is afraid for himself and for the future, and in the end he doesn't act. I am never one to advocate violence, but I found myself wishing he would just do it, knowing my wishes would not be answered, that history cannot so easily be rewritten. It is chilling and horrible, and as a German, I find it really difficult to read about this time, though I do so often since it is so important to remember.
Reading Munich, I also could not help but think of our current political climate, not only in the US but around the world. The extremist right has been gaining ground in recent years (I think of Marine Le Pen, Geert Wilders, the AfD...) and polarization is rending societies apart. The alt-right feels justified in openly pronouncing their credo of hatred and divisiveness. At the same time, I have to remind myself that this has caused me to be more politically aware than ever before and has roused so many to be engaged and active to fight the aforementioned. I suppose where I am going with this is that we have to keep remembering and we have to keep reading telling stories like Munich, because disaster can be averted when people are brave and vigilant and willing to act. Initially, this review was meant to be a few complimentary lines, but I guess it provoked more in me than that. Munich isn't the best book about the Second World War or Hitler, but it is among the best I have read about the window of time just before the horror began. It serves as a powerful reminder that we need to be aware and willing to act when we see injustice on any scale about to happen.

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Reading Progress

Finished Reading (Paperback Edition)
October 14, 2017 – Shelved as: to-read (Paperback Edition)
October 14, 2017 – Shelved (Paperback Edition)
November 7, 2017 – Started Reading
November 7, 2017 – Shelved
November 12, 2017 – Shelved as: mystery-suspense
November 12, 2017 – Shelved as: historical-fiction
November 12, 2017 – Shelved as: best-of-2017
November 12, 2017 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-19 of 19 (19 new)

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message 1: by Jaline (new) - added it

Jaline Terrific review, Malia! And it continues to amaze me, too, how so many books we are all coming across directly relate to our world situation today. :)


(^_^)Savanna (^_^)Kirwin(^_^) yh ture in a way


message 3: by Malia (new) - added it

Malia Jaline wrote: "Terrific review, Malia! And it continues to amaze me, too, how so many books we are all coming across directly relate to our world situation today. :)"

Thanks, Jaline, I agree! I guess history does repeat itself, even if we are often too slow to realize it, which is fairly depressing...


message 4: by Jo (new)

Jo Excellent review Malia, I’m glad this book moved you in this way.


message 5: by Malia (new) - added it

Malia Jo wrote: "Excellent review Malia, I’m glad this book moved you in this way."

Thank you, Jo!


message 6: by Arah-Lynda (new) - added it

Arah-Lynda A very moving review Malia that has put this one on my radar. Thank you.


message 7: by Malia (new) - added it

Malia Arah-Lynda wrote: "A very moving review Malia that has put this one on my radar. Thank you."

Thank you! I hope you enjoy it as much as I did:-)


message 8: by Ray (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ray Palen Nice, Malia. My review is set to run next Friday on Bookreporter.com. I will be curious as to what you think.


message 9: by Malia (new) - added it

Malia Ray wrote: "Nice, Malia. My review is set to run next Friday on Bookreporter.com. I will be curious as to what you think."

Thanks, Ray! I look forward to reading what you thought of it:-)


Jeanette Do not equate Nazis with today's what you call "alt right". Believe me they are totally different. By your context in this review JFK would be right of your "alt" right. And it is the intolerance of the Socialist left that carved the most division within their PC calling out and identity politics. I know you believe what you believe because that's what you have been taught. But I have lived more than 70 years and have seen REAL hate. On these definitions of politico you are in error. Far more violence has come from the left in my lifetime. Many, many multiples of millions under totalitarian socialist and communist entities alone. Right now more expressed hate is coming from the left too.All you need to do is watch media and hear elites express it continually. No one is invading anywhere either, nor are citizens being silenced. You can not equate same.


message 11: by Malia (new) - added it

Malia Jeanette wrote: "Do not equate Nazis with today's what you call "alt right". Believe me they are totally different. By your context in this review JFK would be right of your "alt" right. And it is the intolerance o..."

Hi Jeanette,

Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I am not equating the alt right with the Nazis, rather I am observing that extremism (on any side) can quickly spiral out of control and it is important to remain aware. We may have different political opinions, but let's not argue, there is enough of that going on the world already. We can easily have different views and enjoy the same book. What do you think of Munich so far? Are you enjoying it?


Jeanette Oh yes! Harris is one of my favorite writers. So many thought this book just "less" than his others. But I'd much rather this crux point than an alternative outcome scenario like Fatherland. This is to the core of when negotiation becomes closer to redefining base terms to points of complying rather than any true or practical applications solution.


message 13: by Barbara (new)

Barbara Nice review Malia. I agree that - with the current climate of intolerance growing - we need to be aware of what this can lead to.
"Munich" may have been a sincere effort but it's clear that nothing would stop Hitler.


message 14: by Malia (new) - added it

Malia Barbara wrote: "Nice review Malia. I agree that - with the current climate of intolerance growing - we need to be aware of what this can lead to.
"Munich" may have been a sincere effort but it's clear that nothing..."


Thank you, Barbara!


message 15: by Deyanne (new)

Deyanne Thought-provoking and insightful review. Loved your honesty.


message 16: by Malia (new) - added it

Malia Deyanne wrote: "Thought-provoking and insightful review. Loved your honesty."

Thank you, Deyanne!


message 17: by Lilo (new)

Lilo I feel the very same way you do, Malia.


message 18: by Ryan (new) - rated it 3 stars

Ryan I don’t think white-washing the hateful ‘alt-right� or its tactics is a particularly good idea, Jeanette.


message 19: by Malia (new) - added it

Malia Lilo wrote: "I feel the very same way you do, Malia."

Thank you:)


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