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In the Presence of Mine Enemies
 
 
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In the Presence of Mine Enemies [Mass Market Paperback]

Harry Turtledove
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
Price: £5.73 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 528 pages
  • Publisher: Roc; Reprint edition (4 Nov 2004)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0451459598
  • ISBN-13: 978-0451459596
  • Product Dimensions: 17.3 x 10.8 x 3.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 75,782 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Harry Turtledove
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
24 of 25 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
In the Presence of Mine Enemies is, quite clearly, the most personal book of Turtledove's career. I must say the action is both slow and muted and, in a heightening of Turtledove's inimitable style, all the 'action' and 'major events' are off-page, that is, they are represented through the thoughts and discussions of the characters. For all this, I have to say the sheer emotion poured into this book by Turtledove is not only engrossing but sweeps you up too. I was hooked and could hardly put the book down (despite my 4 star rating - reasons later) despite having a very busy time with my work. I made the time to read this book and, if you read it, you will too. The tightening of narrative focus into a half dozen characters concentrates Turtledove's ... dare I say it ... genius from his 'Cast of Thousands' novels (Great War and World War Series & Colonization series) beautifully making the emotion and the reading all the more compelling. Reading this book is like taking a personalised walk with Turtledove through 2010's Alternate might-have-been Berlin, 80 years into the Thousand Year Reich. This book is so powerful, I as reading it at home and my wife, noting my scowl, kept asking me if I was alright, my less than indicative response of "F------- Nazis!" was fairly explanatory in a broad sense, and a testament to Turtledove's skill, style and bravery, to be fair.
Downsides: (1) American pre-occupation with the 'poor state' of British teeth - After the third mention within 6 pages I remember thinking: Turtledove, let it go! What *IS* it with Americans and our teeth?
(2) Every AH book I've read on the Nazis-winning-the-world-war (Except 'Fatherland') theme seems to view the Nazis as, eventually, softening and moving towards a Democracy, getting less harsh and dealing with the 'errors' in judgement they had - this I began thinking was (to an extent) no exception and my heart sank - why do people want to apologise, even indirectly, for these people? Turtledove's 'borrowing' from Soviet history is, unfortunately, less than inspired - why not go for Roman History? Democracy becomes Plutocracy becomes Dictatorship. Why assume governments will soften and democratise? Hence only 4 stars. However Turtledove does have a sting in his tale...
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22 of 24 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
In the Presence of Mine Enemies allows Turtledove to take a break from his other series and do a self-contained novel set in the normally cliched world where the Germans won World War II and are dominating everything. I say "normally cliched" because Turtledove actually does a good job of making it seem fresh and interesting. It is the early 21st Century. The Germans and the Japanese won the war, cities in the USA were nuked in a second conflict after the European one ended, making the United States agree to be subjugated, paying tribute money every year to Berlin. Everybody figures that the next war will be against Japan for final control of the world, but for now an uneasy peace settles between the two empires.

Jews have been eliminated from most of Europe, but like the cockroaches the Germans in this novel think they are, hidden infestations are everywhere, including right under there noses. This provides most of the story, as we are told of a society of hidden Jews who are working amidst every-day Germans in Berlin and elsewhere. The main character, Heinrich Gimpel, works for the Wehrmacht (the German army) as the man in charge of keeping tabs on the American money that gets sent to Berlin every year. At the beginning of the book, the ritualistic revealing of the family Jewish secrets to 10-year-old Alicia Gimpel occurs. When the parents think they are ready, their ancestry is revealed and they are absorbed into the conspiracy of silence. The children have to adjust to the raging anti-Semitism around them as well as changing their own feelings, because they have been indoctrinated with all of the anti-Jewish hate and must learn that they are the people who most other Germans consider the devil.

Turtledove does an excellent job of telling the intensely personal story of this family along with the story of massive political change in Germany. Momentous events around the world sit beside the normal affairs and other personal problems that we all have, not to mention the secrets that the Gimpels and their friends are hiding. While sometimes kept to the background of the story, the specter of their ancestry is always hanging over them, even as events move to perhaps eventually allow them to admit in public what they've hidden for generations. Even when Turtledove seems to forget that aspect of the story as he tells of the politics (especially toward the end of the book), something often comes to the forefront as a harsh reminder of just what's at stake. Heinrich is caught up in the political changes but has to guard himself, lest he reveal their secrets in a rushed reaction to the world changing around him. He knows that with one misstep, extermination awaits him and his family.

I was really impressed with the economy of viewpoint characters Turtledove uses. He uses the three Gimpels who are aware of the secret (two younger children don't know, which provides a lot of the conflict for Alicia, as she can't tell them but has to put up with, in silence, the anti-Semitic statements made by them) along with three other Jews who are in their circle of friends. With these characters, he is able to tell their story, a story of political change, as well as the deeply personal story of a troubled marriage and the effects it has on the Gimpels as Heinrich becomes the object of affection for a frustrated wife. Usually, Turtledove has so many characters that it's hard to keep them straight. I have always felt that this is probably why Turtledove insists on introducing them constantly almost every time they appear in the book. However, that reasoning must be faulty, because there are only six of them and he still insists on doing that. It became very aggravating.

One thing I did find amazing is that Turtledove does manage to avoid most of the pitfalls his books usually fall in to. Sure, there is the introduction of characters mentioned above, but at least Turtledove makes every one of them interesting. It's almost heart-breaking watching Alicia struggle with the new knowledge she has gained, having to silently accept all of the statements made against her new-found people by her younger sisters as well as everybody in school. She finds it incredibly hard to absorb this new information and not reveal it to others through actions or, worse, inaction. Your nerves actually clench a little bit when the fighting between Heinrich's friend Willi and his wife Elena almost results in an affair that could jeopardize not only Heinrich's marriage but also accidentally reveal their secret. There are no useless characters in this one, and even the minor characters attract the reader's interest just enough to not be annoying. Turtledove also avoids the gratuitous, badly-written love scene. He effectively fades to black a couple of times and even the one that he does include doesn't concentrate on the details. I applaud him for this, as it really has been a weakness of his in the books that I've read.

His prose is still wooden enough to give a woodpecker a woody, but it's not too bad this time around, probably because he's avoided most of his other problems. The climax of the book, while pulse-pounding as change sweeps through Germany, is so obviously a copy of the fall of another Evil Empire that it becomes very predictable. It's to Turtledove's credit that he makes the book interesting despite this, though by this time you have enough invested in the characters that you want to keep reading despite knowing what's going to happen. Inertia perhaps?

In the Presence of Mine Enemies is an excellent book of alternate history, and probably the best book I've read by him. Give it a shot, even if you've found his other series to be a waste of time. This one isn't.

David Roy

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Format:Mass Market Paperback
I'm sorry but this is one of the most boring Turtledove books I have read - I've got a shelf full of them! It's an extension of a short story first published in 1992 and should have stayed that - short! Ok the characters are deep and rounded but when they start going on about bridge games I just wanted to skip chapter after chapter - enough to induce the Z'ds big time! Do yourself a big favour and buy Departures by HT, let your own imagination go and save yourself five quid.
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