In Pugnetti’s historical WWII novel, Bjorn Erliksen goes from being a quiet, solitary farmer to a tough commando in the Norwegian resistance force.
It seems possible in 1940 that the looming war will spare Norway. Then the Germans do show up, and Bjorn vows to defend his homeland. After a rocky start, he escapes to England to become a proper commando. This will be a scary, clandestine life. One of his contacts back home turns out to be Truni Sonnesen, an old love and an emotional complication. But they are a good team and manage to sabotage a fuel depot and to assassinate a Norwegian police officer–turned-Nazi in Bergen. At length, Bjorn is arrested. Does the Gestapo really know that he is part of the resistance, or are they guessing? It doesn’t matter because he is interrogated and brutally tortured for six months. He finds reserves of stoic bravery that he never imagined. It’s a credit to Pugnetti’s imagination and research that the reader may often forget this is largely fiction and that Bjorn and Truni and others are products of the author’s imagination. And although there are many other characters, he was wise to focus so strongly on Bjorn, making it a linear narrative. There are some great and gripping scenes, as when they ride out a fierce storm in the North Sea: “Winds whistled like a hot tea kettle, rattling the wheelhouse door and demanding to be let in.” The descriptions of torture and deprivation—such as eating salted herring, head, guts, and all—are almost too much to bear, and though we hear so much (and rightly) about the Greatest Generation, readers will still be awestruck at their bravery. An afterword separates fact and fiction, an interesting, helpful perspective.
An exciting, high-stakes story skillfully told.