In the aftermath of Kristallnacht, German resistance fighter Daniel Lohr escapes to Shanghai only to be surrounded by a different brand of violence.
Daniel, who’s half-Jewish, is among a shipload of European Jews who jump at the chance to relocate to Shanghai, even if it means surrendering all their money and worldly goods to the Nazis. As unlikely a destination as it is, it’s the only port that doesn’t require an entrance visa. Daniel, whose Jewish father was killed by the Nazis, goes to work for his uncle Nathan, who runs a successful casino in a dangerous part of Shanghai in advance of the anticipated Japanese occupation. Daniel is quickly indoctrinated into the Chinese gang warfare being waged over control of the clubs when Nathan is shot and wounded. Soon enough, Daniel is as enmeshed in the killing culture as anyone, committing bad acts when not diplomatically making nice to bad sorts—chief among them Colonel Yamada, slimy head of Kempeitai, the Japanese gestapo. When Daniel sees Leah, his shipboard romance, in the forced company of Yamada, you know a violent reckoning awaits. As in his spy novels (The Berlin Exchange, 2022; Istanbul Passage, 2012), Kanon demonstrates a mastery of closed-in drama. Such is the jabbing understatement of the dialogue—what’s withheld matters more than what’s said—that it holds you in suspense as much as any action scene. Though the author’s use of the Holocaust as a mere backdrop to the story may leave some readers uneasy, the contrast between his impeccable control and the nightmarish chaos of this time and place gives things a powerful edge.
Kanon goes to China with stirring results.