Best known for Dancing on Tisha BAv, the ground-breaking story collection
exploring the lives of children of Holocaust survivors, Lev Raphael is also the author of
five popular mysteries. Now he combines his talents in a story of emotional suspense.
Paul has spent his life runningfrom New York, the city of his birth; from his beautiful
beshert; from contact with his brother and sister; but mostly from his mother, a
Holocaust survivor of inexplicable coldness. Upon her death, the children face shocking
questions. What caused this healthy womans death? Why did she divide their
inheritance so that Paul, the least favorite son, was singled out to receive the most, the
dreaded German money, a bequest of a million dollars accrued from German
reparations to survivors
a gift as cynical as it is generous.
What a
gift for a writer to be able to sustain unflagging, sweaty-palm suspense in a novel almost
through character alone. This is what the prodigious Lev Raphael pulls off in The German Money,
a mystery whose shocking denouement is so organic to the whole thing that it feels as if a
boiling volcano has finally let loose. Best
known for his fiction and nonfiction about Holocaust survivors' children, Raphael has also
written five witty mysteries. The German Money
combines his multiple talents with his understanding of Holocaust survivors and their
families to produce one of the most powerful suspense novels in years, a kind of Kafka
meets Philip Roth meets le Carré
a beautifully modulated narrative.
--The Washington
Post Book World
If youre starving for a powerful novel, buy Lev
Raphaels latest book, The German Money, a
potent, contemporary story about the complicated lives of three Jewish siblings,
descendants of a mother who survived the death factories of the Holocaust, and had a
closely guarded a terrible secret, the kind that tears lives apart. Raphael carefully
escorts his readers into the sad, touching lives of the siblings, then expertly guides us
among the powerful scenes.
--The Fort Worth Star-Sentinel
Raphael
applies his talents as a suspense writer to this unconventional Holocaust novel . . . The
sharpness of the family portrait and the appeal of the romantic subplot make this an
engaging read.
--Publishers Weekly
A heartfelt story of rediscovered
romance.
--Booklist
"Truly
inspired."
--The Denver Post
This is a very intimate book. Bright and creative.
Unexpected and significant. For a man who has spent his life refusing to accept that the
Holocaust has anything to do with him, inheriting these funds feels like anything but a
blessing. Eventually the truth reveals itself in a shocking conclusion. Having recognized
that truth, I was wrapped up in Pauls journey and found it quite compelling.
--Jewish Book World
My favorite book to recommend to book
groups this month is a new novel called The German
Money. I agree with Kafka when he says,
A book must be the ax for the frozen sea within us, especially when it comes
to book club reading. If you don't find your
world rocked and your assumptions challenged, then what will there be to discuss? This is
an intense novel that insists its reader fall into a world filled with secrets and
silences, the world, in fact, of many children of Holocaust survivors. Readers will
know what it is to be an angry and embittered young Jewish man who has spent the better
part of his life running from something that happened over fifty years ago, to a
completely different person. The German Money wields a sharp axe at a vast
frozen sea, indeed.
Nicki Leone, WHQR 91.3 FM, North Carolina Public Radio
"Lev Raphael delivers the goods in a
thriller with a wicked twist. It is a fast, engaging read, with glints of insight, and a
deeper, twisting
message about the ambiguities of history and human nature."
The
Jerusalem
Post
"An inventive mixture of Second
Generation family and mystery tales.....Raphael has a fine ear for the diction and accents
of New York and of refugee life especially, and he
has a writer's mordant eye for revealing his main
character's inner life ."
Jerusalem Report
"This novel is a finely executed quest, a voyage of discovery, and
at last a hopeful tribute to the ability of the damaged human heart to heal." Read the whole review.
Steven Hartov, The
Detroit Jewish News
"Lev Raphael is a daring writerone who will not be restrained by genre, but who tells
his story with all the tools at his command. The German Money combines all of
Raphael's estimable talents, delivering an emotional thriller about a totally believable
contemporary family coming to terms with fifty years of silence."
Edmund White, Author of A Boy's
Own Story
"Lev Raphael's new novel is a powerful, haunting and erotic tale. The stunning
narrative builds to a shocking denouement and kept me turning pages faster and faster to
learn the truth."
Linda Fairstein, Author of The
Bone Vault
Lev Raphael writes of love, redemption, and revenge with an unflinching
honesty that is rare and beautiful. This is an exquisite portrayal of a troubled family,
of three siblings each affected differently, but painfully, by their mother's past. A
poignant reminder that we cannot hide from history no matter how fast and far we run, The German Money is a true and powerful
triumph.
Binnie Kirshenbaum, Author of Hester
Among the Ruins
And this
from From DorothyL: The Mystery
Readers and Writers ListServ:
I don't think I can add
much to the Washington Post review of Lev Raphael's The
German Money. It is an outstanding book
and deserves all the praise it has been receiving. Some
DorothyLers may not pick this book up since it isn't classified as a mystery, but it
contains the elements of the greatest mysteries of all...the human heart and psyche. Paul,
has been almost estranged from his family for years. He
moved from New York to Ann Arbor and the fact that he prefers Michigan to New York City is baffling to them. His two siblings have learned to cope in their own
way with the bluster of their father and the seeming coldness of their mother, a Holocaust
survivor. When Paul returns, shortly after his
mother's death, he is astonished to learn that he inherits "the German money",
restitution paid to Holocaust victims. He can not understand the motive for this since his
mother never touched the money even though it was invested and grew to a tidy sum and
certainly never showed him any love or affection. Haunting and unforgettable, The German Money is even better than I expected
from Lev, and having read his novel, short stories and Journeys & Arrivals, I did expect a lot.
--Doris Ann Noirris, Librarian
Lev Raphael is the author of thirteen books and known internationally as the
chronicler of the lives of the children of Holocaust survivors. Winner of the Lambda
Literary Award, among many prizes, his short works have appeared in two dozen anthologies,
including American Jewish Fiction: A Century of Stories. He is a book critic for
National Public Radio and the 'Mysteries' columnist for the Detroit Free Press.
Read a lot more about Lev and all his books on his website www.levraphael.com.