Kirkus Reviews QR Code
EDEN UNDONE by Abbott Kahler

EDEN UNDONE

A True Story of Sex, Murder, and Utopia at the Dawn of World War II

by Abbott Kahler

Pub Date: Sept. 24th, 2024
ISBN: 9780451498656
Publisher: Crown

Strangers in paradise.

Kahler (aka Karen Abbott), host of the podcast Remus: The Mad Bootleg King, biographer of famed stripper Gypsy Rose Lee, and chronicler of sin and scoundrels, briskly recounts the mysterious history of the small Galapagos island, Floreana. Drawing on diaries, letters, and news reports, Kahler follows the fortunes and misfortunes of a handful of eccentric Europeans who settled on the island, beginning in 1929, sharing the fervent desire “to create a utopia, although each of them had different visions as to what a utopia might be.” First to arrive were Dr. Friedrich Ritter, a narcissistic German physician, and his patient Dore Strauch, who left their respective spouses with the plan “to live a life of contemplation, of mutual love and simple work with natural things.” But news reports about their endeavor turned the “Modern Adam and Eve” into the objects of such sensational publicity that others followed. Some—journalists, scientists, and wealthy Americans eager to see exotic wildlife—made brief recurring visits; among those who stayed, intruding on the couple’s life of contemplation, were a German war veteran, his pregnant lover, and his sickly teenage son and the rapacious Baroness Wagner, accompanied by two lovers, who planned to build a luxury hotel. “My companion and I cannot but laugh at the ‘Galapagos psychosis’ which is reported to have broken out in Germany,” Ritter wrote. “It is the result of entirely wrong notions of our so-called paradise.” Life on the island was physically challenging for all of them; Friedrich, notably, was “an absolute dilettante in terms of survival skills.” But equally challenging was a deepening atmosphere of hostility and distrust: Friedrich’s cruelty toward Dore; the Baroness’ viciousness, greed, and betrayal; and the eruption of violent rages—leading, Kahler reveals, very likely to murder.

A spirited page-turner.