The Silver Mosaic, a Winston Churchill 1930s Thriller

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Pub Date Jul 24 2017 | Archive Date Oct 31 2017

Description

March, 1933. The weak German economy is in peril. Winston Churchill wants to push it over the cliff with a boycott of German exports and take with it the new Nazi government whose brown-shirt SA thugs are terrorizing German Jews. He enlists Hearst journalist Mattie McGary, but the Nazis are determined to fight back. To oppose the boycott, they find unlikely allies in the Jews of Palestine and FDR.


Michael McMenamin and Patrick McMenamin are the co-authors of the award winning 1930s era “Winston Churchill Thriller” series. The first four novels in the series—The DeValera Deception, The Parsifal Pursuit, The Gemini Agenda and The Berghof Betrayal—received a total of 14 literary awards. The Silver Mosaic is their fifth Winston Churchill Thriller and they are currently at work on their sixth, The Liebold Protocol. Both Michael and Patrick have travelled extensively in Europe, South America, Central America and Asia while Patrick has also travelled in the Middle East and Africa.

 

Michael is the author of the critically acclaimed Becoming Winston Churchill, The Untold Story of Young Winston and His American Mentor [Hardcover, Greenwood 2007; Paperback, Enigma 2009] and co-author of Milking the Public, Political Scandals of the Dairy Lobby from LBJ to Jimmy Carter [Nelson Hall, 1980]. He is an editorial board member of Finest Hour, the quarterly journal of the Churchill Centre and Museum in London and a contributing editor for the libertarian magazine Reason. His work has also appeared in The Churchills in Ireland, 1660-1965, Corrections and Controversies [Irish Academic Press, 2012] as well as two Reason anthologies, Free Minds & Free Markets, Twenty Five Years of Reason [Pacific Research Institute, 1993] and Choice, the Best of Reason [BenBella Books, 2004]. He was formerly a first amendment and media defense lawyer and a U.S. Army counter-intelligence agent.   

 

Patrick, the other half of the father-son writing team, is an award-winning journalist who has produced stories for ABC News, Fox News and HuffPost. He is a Phi Beta Kappa cum laude graduate of the University of Rochester with Departmental Honors in both 20th Century European history and Film Studies.


Don’t miss the next

Winston Churchill Thriller:

The Liebold Protocol

Visit the authors at

 

www.winstonchurchillthrillers.com

https://www.facebook.com/WinstonChurchillThrillers

keywords: Churchill, Hitler, Göring, Rohm (add the umlaut), FDR, Chamberlain, anti-Semitism, boycott, Storm Trooper, Nazi

March, 1933. The weak German economy is in peril. Winston Churchill wants to push it over the cliff with a boycott of German exports and take with it the new Nazi government whose brown-shirt SA...


A Note From the Publisher

keywords: Churchill, Hitler, Göring, Röhm, FDR, Chamberlain, anti-Semitism, boycott, Storm Trooper, Nazi

keywords: Churchill, Hitler, Göring, Röhm, FDR, Chamberlain, anti-Semitism, boycott, Storm Trooper, Nazi


Available Editions

EDITION Ebook
ISBN 9781506904511
PRICE $9.99 (USD)

Average rating from 2 members


Featured Reviews

It it 1933. Adolph Hitler is chancellor of Germany but is not yet in complete control of the government. Hitler's greatest rival. SA leader. Ernst Rohm, is ordering the killing of Jews, the burning synagogues and the roughing up of tourists. This leads to an international Jewish boycott of German goods, a movement encouraged by Winston Churchill and the American Rabbi, Abba Hillel Silver. But the boycott is opposed by both the U.S. and British governments along with a Zionist group in Palestine.
Such is the premise for the fifth Winston Churchill thriller novel, The Silver Mosaic by the father and son team of Michael and Patrick McMenamin.
It is possible to comprehend this complex story without reading the prior novels, but new readers may be overwhelmed by the large number of characters popping up in the early chapters. There is an American military secret agent, his Scottish journalist girlfriend, Three Irish assassins, a Jewish Palestinian assassin, various SS and SA thugs, along with historical figures like FDR, Hermann Goring and Reinhard Heydrich.
The book centers on a convoluted plot involving stolen microfilm of German industrial secrets that the boycott proponents want to use to collapse the economy and force Hitler from power.
To say the plot lacks credibility is an understatement. One character survives two kidnappings and four assassination attempts. But the action sequences are well written and the work moves along at such a rapid clip, that you overlook some plot holes. For example, the female journalist has her gun seized and tossed into a river, but near the end of the story, it mysteriously shows up in her purse. There is also a reference to the Guinness Book of World Records, which was not published until 20 years after the novel takes place.
The Silver Mosaic does succeed at portraying the ambiguous relationship between the U.S., the U.K. and Nazi Germany in the early 1930s. Both future allied governments were reluctant to wreck the Germany economy for fear it would damage their own country's recovery from the depression. The novel also tells the little-known story of how Zionist Jews in Palestine cooperated with the Nazis in hopes of getting more German Jews to emigrate to the Holy Land.
As is often the case in these types of thrillers, the characterizations are s two dimensional. Even Churchill doesn't come off as a realistic character. And the dialogue sounds as if it was cribbed from a 1940s film noir script. There are also some graphic, violent torture scenes that may put off some readers.
Nevertheless, I can recommend The Silver Mosaic to those who are interested in World War II, spy novels or escapist fiction. The notes at the end delineate what was historical and what was made up. There is also a helpful list of nonfiction books dealing with the subject of the novel.

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