ABSTRACT

This is the first book- length academic study of the portrayal in contemporary historical crime fiction of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust and their legacies. It discusses novels written by five authors: David Downing, Philip Kerr, Luke McCallin, Joseph Kanon and David Thomas. Their work belongs to a subgenre of the historical crime novel that has emerged since the late 1980s to become a significant body of writing located at the intersection of crime fiction and Holocaust literature. The readings of these novels explore questions of form and genre to ask how popular fiction might approach the Holocaust. Themes of resistance and complicity and the relationship between them, and problems of guilt and responsibility are also discussed. This book also explores questions of justice to show how these novels explore social and moral justice, and vengeance and revenge, as alternatives to ordinary legal justice after the Holocaust.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|20 pages

David Downing: Station Series 1

‘Ordinary Germans Doing Ordinary Things'

chapter 2|25 pages

David Downing: Station Series 2

‘Did the Germans Do This, or Just the Nazis?’

chapter 3|18 pages

Philip Kerr: Bernie Gunther Novels 1–9

‘But What's One More Murder?’

chapter 4|27 pages

Philip Kerr: Bernie Gunther Novels 10–14

‘There's No Human Justice That Could Ever Be Enough'

chapter 5|18 pages

Luke McCallin: Gregor Reinhardt Trilogy

‘Something to Come Back To'

chapter 6|18 pages

Joseph Kanon: Alibi

‘The Wicked and the Merely Acquiescent'

chapter 7|18 pages

Joseph Kanon: The Accomplice

‘It's Not Justice, But It's Something'

chapter 8|24 pages

David Thomas: Ostland

‘That “Only Obeying Orders” Shit'