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David Roberts writes...
22nd August 2006
About The Quality of Mercy – the new book
in the series to be published in October 2006
Although we worry about the Middle East and the possibility that
some fanatic might use a nuclear weapon, we do not live under the
threat of total disaster – even annihilation – as did
those of us who grew up during the Cold War. In the Cuban Missile
Crisis we believed with justification that nuclear war might destroy
our world and there was nothing we as individuals could do about
it.
The same dread possessed those living in the latter half of the
1930s. The ‘war-to-end-all-wars’ turned out to have
been merely a truce. Every effort was made by the democracies to
prevent a new, more horrible war but most people knew in their hearts
that war was inevitable – the only question was when. Appeasement
was the official policy of the British Government. Prime Minister
Chamberlain believed that the ravening monster that was Nazi Germany
could be sated once it had swallowed up all German-speaking Europe
but every bone that was thrown to Hitler made him hungrier. He sensed
that Britain and France were so reluctant to stand up to him that
he could do what he liked with impunity.
In March 1938 Hitler marched into Austria to be greeted by cheers
from most of the population. Hitler declared a new Greater Reich.
This was the Anschluss. Hitler hated Vienna where he had been humiliated
as a poor art student in the 20s so made Linz the new provincial
capital and left Austria’s Jews to the tender mercies of the
SS under Adolph Eichmann.
Verity, the New Gazette’s correspondent in Vienna is dismayed
to see how easily Hitler has gobbled up another country and is equally
appalled at the lack of interest the English display. As a Communist
she is lucky to escape Vienna with her life but she does not enjoy
having to hang about at home twiddling her fingers while history
is being made across the Channel. She has one satisfaction: before
she leaves Vienna she manages to help an Austrian Jew escape to
England. But he finds only danger where he had hoped to find refuge.
Edward meanwhile meets an old school chum, a Maharaja no less who
is staying with Lord Louis Mountbatten at his country house, Broadlands.
Murder is another visitor to Broadlands and Edward and Verity have
to investigate a killing much too close to home for comfort. And
Verity’s dog Basil causes mayhem on the polo ground.
Verity and Edward have to answer the question – what does
one man’s death matter when so many hundreds of thousands
are dying under Nazi rule. One answer is supplied by the Kindertransport
– the effort Britain made to rescue Jewish children from Vienna
and Berlin. In the last years before war broke out, the trains rumbled
across Europe many taking Jews to Concentration camps but some carrying
children to safety in England. Just ten thousand children were saved
but all of whom would otherwise have died in Nazi death camps.
As the threat of total war looms, the mood darkens but at least
Verity is now able to see that Edward is the man she loves. I have
been so grateful for all your letters and emails about the series
and about Edward and Verity’s troubled relationship. I hope
that after the misunderstandings between the two of them peace and
love, as we used to say in the 60s, will now prevail but somehow
I doubt it.
Good reading, and do let me know what you think but remember the
quality of mercy is not strained but droppeth like the gentle rain
from heaven!
- David Roberts
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