cover image The Night of Shooting Stars

The Night of Shooting Stars

Ben Pastor. Bitter Lemon, $14.95 trade paper (352p) ISBN 978-1-912242-28-3

In Pastor’s intelligent if somewhat labored seventh Martin Bora mystery (after 2019’s The Horseman’s Song), the gentlemanly German army officer, who has returned to Berlin from the Italian front in July 1944 for a funeral, receives a summons from Arthur Nebe, the chief of the Criminal Police. Many pages pass before Bora actually meets with Nebe, who wants him to investigate the murder of the enigmatic Walter Niemeyer, who went under a variety of aliases, one of which was the Weimar Prophet, a high-society clairvoyant who flourished in the decadent years before the Nazi takeover of Germany in 1933. Bora learns that Niemeyer was able to convince many of his extrasensory gifts, including high-ranking members of the Third Reich. Filled with period details, the narrative dwells on Bora’s complex family dynamics as well as encounters with such historical figures as Claus von Stauffenberg, a principal in the July 20 plot to kill Hitler. The author’s fine style compensates only in part for the slow-moving mystery plot. Fans of the late Philip Kerr’s Bernie Gunther series may want to give Pastor a try. (July)