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TRAITORS by Bill  Issel

TRAITORS

by Bill Issel

Pub Date: May 13th, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-926664-75-3
Publisher: Carleton Street Publications

In this World War II novel, a cryptic message left on the body of a murder victim in 1942 San Francisco focuses the FBI’s attention on a small group of German sympathizers funded by the Nazi regime.

The body of Charles Brown, former president of the local “America First Committee,” is found in his Hatzfeld Enterprises office. On his corpse is a handwritten sign that reads “Traitor.” Below that are the words “The Grynszpan Group.” The police chief has brought in his go-to investigator for national security matters, former San Francisco Police Commissioner Tony Bosco. DS Dennis Sullivan, who worked with Tony on an earlier case, explains the Grynszpan allusion, which references a young, disgruntled Polish Jewish loner who, in 1938, killed a German Parisian Embassy official. Is this the work of Jewish terrorists? The second member of Tony’s team, Ruthie Fuller, says they must consult with her friend Jacob Weiss, an FBI agent handling Nazi, Fascist, and Communist subversion cases. In a compelling narrative side trip, Issel takes readers back to 1938 to build the poignant backstory for Jacob, the novel’s complex and conflicted lead character. Born in San Francisco, Jacob was raised in Vienna and then relocated to Palestine with his parents and sister after the rise of Hitler. Two years later, his family was murdered by an Arab terrorist in a tragedy that sets the course of the teenager’s life. He joined Capt. Orde Wingate’s Special Night Squad, a contingent of Jewish soldiers recruited to protect Jewish settlers, and Jacob’s experience in the group ultimately led him back to the city of his birth. The author, a history scholar, lays out a vivid, disturbing portrait of San Francisco just entering the war, a city terrified of foreign attacks; rife with antisemitism, racial bigotry, and ethnic discrimination; and politically and socially roiled by anti-immigrant fervor. But his mixture of history, well-paced action scenes, and an entertaining investigation of a series of mysterious murders occasionally becomes subsumed by superficial on-the-one-hand, on-the-other-hand conversations among the central Jewish characters about Zionism. This is a curious debate given their knowledge, albeit rudimentary, of what is already befalling European Jews.

An intriguing and enjoyable game of cat and mouse that involves catching a killer.