cover image The March Fallen

The March Fallen

Volker Kutscher, trans. from the German by Nial Sellar. Sandstone, $12.99 trade paper (598p) ISBN 978-1-913207-04-5

Set in 1933, Kutscher’s fifth mystery featuring Berlin police detective Gereon Rath (after 2019’s The Fatherland Files) cleverly integrates the tensions around the Reichstag fire into a baffling whodunit. Both Rath and his fiancée, fellow cop Charly Ritter, become involved in probing an unusual murder. A dead tramp fatally stabbed through one nostril has been discovered near a railway line. Papers identify him as WWI veteran Heinrich Wosniak, who previously survived a gruesome crime; two years earlier, he was one of 10 beggars whose shack had been set on fire, killing seven. Charged with the attack was the daughter of one of the dead men, 15-year-old Hannah Singer, who was found at the scene of the crime with the matches used to start the fatal blaze. During her multiple interrogations, Singer remained mute, leaving her motive obscure. Since Hannah has since been confined in an asylum, she’s not suspected of the current murder, which was committed with an unusual weapon used by German soldiers in WWI. Kutscher makes the increasing anxiety of Rath and Ritter palpable as the Nazis’ grip on power tightens, creating tension even in a situation where the reader knows how the struggle for control of Germany turns out. Sharply observed period details reflect the author’s thorough research. Philip Kerr fans will be pleased. (Dec.)