A Break in the Storm
By Arnold Simon
www.abreakinthestorm.com
Hindsight is 20/20.
If you ask most any American what they though of
Adolf Hitler, they will possibly refer to him as evil, as a
murderer, crazy and some would even refer to him as "The
Anti-Christ". In my opinion, all of these are adequate and I could
add more, however, my feelings were manifested because ‘hindsight is
20/20’. But what if I had been born German? What if I had been
living as a teenager in Germany during 1936? Would my opinion of
Adolf Hitler be as concrete as it is now?
Author, Arnold Simon, tackles this subject
brilliantly in his novel, "A Break in the Storm".
Simon magnificently paints for the reader a clear, 1936, German
vision through the eyes of the lead character Erich Behrndt and
others.
Behrndt is an enthusiastic and idealistic young
German whose father died in World War I. He later watched his mother
work herself to death to afford him an education and a better life
in their homeland. Behrndt feels he has found the potential for his
life when he is taken to hear a powerful and charismatic, German
leader. The leader was Adolf Hitler.
Behrndt is seduced by the promise of making his
country strong again. He is drawn in by the promise of restoring
pride and glory to his country. Behrndt is hooked by the idea that
he will have the opportunity to "make his father proud". He eagerly
joins Hitler’s movement, not realizing that his idealism, sought
through a Nazi government, would come with an expensive price tag.
Simon uses colorful (yet realistic) characters to
adequately express (what I consider) the different ideals of a
struggling social climate whose ultimate future, in our hindsight,
is predestined. Nevertheless, through the interaction of these
characters, Simon demonstrates how close the world came to avoiding
World War II.
Simon’s accounts are so clear and precise, you
might wonder if it is truly ‘fiction’. This book lends human emotion
to an era most of us only read about in textbooks. Arnold Simon
delivers unparalleled social, political and historical fiction in "A
Break in the Storm". I recommend it to everyone that enjoys
history and pays respect to the WWII generation.
Review by Robert Denson III
Managing Editor of Sunpiper Press
Owner of Sunpiper Media
www.sunpiperpress.com
/
www.sunpiper.com