Books: Operation Berlin

I thoroughly enjoyed Michael Ridpath’s Operation Berlin, a murder-mystery set in Germany between the Wars. It is well-written, a well-constructed murder mystery puzzle that obeys the rules of the genre, and stands alone as an excellent story. In the smoke-filled cabarets and fractured streets of 1930 Berlin, silence is often a survival tactic. But in this gripping new murder mystery, historian Archie Laverick finds that the ghosts of the Great War are not easily laid to rest.

Operation Berlin by Michael Ridpath

Archie Laverick is a refreshing departure from the typical detective he is a scholar scarred by shell shock (PTSD), his battle is internal. His journey to Berlin to research a Prussian general is a credible setup; grounding the story in the glorious military history of Germany’s past. Archie’s physical and mental fragility adds a layer of high-stakes tension to the narrative. He isn’t a man of action in the traditional sense, but a man of observation, making him a formidable, if reluctant, investigator.

Esme Carmichael provides the perfect narrative spark. She is a ‘spirited young American’ seeking her break as an international correspondent. Esme represents the relentless pursuit of truth in a city built on secrets. The dynamic between the weary, cynical historian and the ambitious, modern journalist drives the plot forward, bridging the gap between the academic study of the past and the urgent, dangerous headlines of the present.

Michael Ridpath captures some of the simmering resentment of a nation rebuilding after WW1. By centering the mystery around a shooting at a Saxon castle and a young Communist woman wrongfully accused, the novel leans heavily into the real-world tensions of the era so that the first shadows of a new conflict are the catalyst for the crime itself.

This is more than a ‘whodunit’. It is a sombre, atmospheric exploration of how truth becomes a liability when a society is desperate to reinvent itself. With a collection of credible characters, from embittered veterans to political chameleons, the book successfully navigates the intrigue of the Weimar Republic.


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