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The Berlin Letters

A Cold War Novel

ebook
5 of 7 copies available
5 of 7 copies available

"Fans of codebreakers, spies, and Cold War dramas will be entrapped by Reay's tale of courage, love, and honor set against the rise and fall of the Berlin Wall." - Booklist Starred Review

Bestselling author Katherine Reay returns with an unforgettable tale of the Cold War and a CIA code breaker who risks everything to free her father from an East German prison.

From the time she was a young girl, Luisa Voekler has loved solving puzzles and cracking codes. Brilliant and logical, she's expected to quickly climb the career ladder at the CIA. But while her coworkers have moved on to thrilling Cold War assignments—especially in the exhilarating era of the late 1980s—Luisa's work remains stuck in the past decoding messages from World War II.

Journalist Haris Voekler grew up a proud East Berliner. But as his eyes open to the realities of postwar East Germany, he realizes that the Soviet promises of a better future are not coming to fruition. After the Berlin Wall goes up, Haris finds himself separated from his young daughter and all alone after his wife dies. There's only one way to reach his family—by sending coded letters to his father-in-law who lives on the other side of the Iron Curtain.

When Luisa Voekler discovers a secret cache of letters written by the father she has long presumed dead, she learns the truth about her grandfather's work, her father's identity, and why she has never progressed in her career. With little more than a rudimentary plan and hope, she journeys to Berlin and risks everything to free her father and get him out of East Berlin alive.

As Luisa and Haris take turns telling their stories, events speed toward one of the twentieth century's most dramatic moments—the fall of the Berlin Wall and that night's promise of freedom, truth, and reconciliation for those who lived, for twenty-eight years, behind the bleak shadow of the Iron Curtain's most iconic symbol.

  • A Cold War novel that takes readers to the heart of Berlin to witness both the early and final days of the Berlin Wall
  • Stand-alone novel
  • Book length: approximately 107,000 words
  • Includes discussion questions for book clubs
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      • Booklist

        Starred review from February 1, 2024
        It's August 1961, and the Berlin Wall is being hastily erected. In a moment of panic, Monica Voekler hands her four-year-old daughter, Luisa, over the barbed wire and into her grandparents' arms. Monica is stopped as she tries to follow, and the family is torn apart, leaving Monica and Luisa's father, Harris, a newspaperman who promotes Communism, bereft in Berlin. Luisa moves to America with her grandparents and is told that her parents were killed in an automobile crash. More than 25 years later, Luisa, who works for the CIA decoding ciphers, is asked to help interpret some letters from Berlin, letters that jog her memories of her grandfather. In a search of her childhood home, Luisa finds a stash of letters written between her father and grandfather spanning two decades. Her family, it seems, is based on secrets, and Luisa uses her skills to uncover the tracks and discover the truth. Parallel plots involving Harris, beginning in 1950s Berlin, and Luisa in 1980s Washington, DC, gradually converge until they collide in a nail-biting climax. Fans of codebreakers, spies, and Cold War dramas will be entrapped by Reay's tale of courage, love, and honor set against the rise and fall of the Berlin Wall.

        COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

      • Library Journal

        July 26, 2024

        A CIA codebreaker unravels her own family's secrets in the latest from Reay (A Shadow in Moscow). Ever since she was thrust across the border to safety by her desperate mother just as the Berlin Wall was going up in 1961, Luisa has been raised by her grandparents in the United States and believes that her parents are long dead in East Germany. But while working at the CIA in 1989, she is shocked to recognize a symbol on coded letters; she's seen the same symbol in her own grandfather's papers. She's even more astonished when she discovers that the letters are part of a decades-long coded correspondence between her grandfather in the United States and her father in East Berlin. When the letters reveal that her father is still alive but in terrible danger in a Stasi prison, Luisa must risk everything for him before it's too late. Reay's tale slowly builds to a gripping and action-packed final third once Luisa begins her high-stakes attempt to rescue her father. VERDICT Fans of codebreaker and espionage-centered historical fiction, like Kate Quinn's The Rose Code or Ariel Lawhon's Code Name H�l�ne, will find much to appreciate here.--Mara Bandy Fass

        Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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    • English

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