Wednesday, May 7, 2025
Heavy Metal May 1979
Sunday, May 4, 2025
Book review: Fatherland
May is 'Third Reich Triumphant' Month at the PorPor Books Blog
3 / 5 Stars
'Fatherland' first was published in hardcover in 1992. This Harper Paperbacks edition (380 pp.) was issued in May, 1993.
UK author Robert Harris (b. 1957) has published a number of novels in the thriller and mystery genres, such as 'The Ghost Writer' (aka 'The Ghost') which was made into a 2010 feature film starring Ewan McGregor. 'Munich' (2017) and 'V2' (2020) are historical adventures centering on the European theater of World War Two. 'The Second Sleep' (2021) is set in a future, post-apocalyptic Britain and thus qualifies as science fiction.
In 'Fatherland,' Germany has won the Second World War by defeating Russia in 1943, the UK a year later. After devastating Japan with the A-Bomb, in 1946 the US is obliged to make peace with Germany when Hitler flies a V3 rocket over New York City, demonstrating the Third Reich's ability to strike at America from afar and the reality of mutual deterrence.
It's now April, 1964, and the only territory in Europe still resisting the Nazis is eastern Russia, where partisans, covertly supported by the US, wage a war of attrition that is draining manpower and money from the otherwise triumphant Reich. Hitler's seventy-five birthday is approaching, and the nationwide celebration will be centered in the massive Chancellery complex in downtown Berlin. Lending considerable importance to the celebration is the thawing of relations between the Reich, and the US and its President, Joseph P. Kennedy.
The protagonist of 'Fatherland' is Xavier March, a stolid, but intelligent, man in his early 40s, a veteran of the U-Boat campaign, and the Battle of the Atlantic. March is an officer in the Berlin Kriminalpolizei, or the branch of the government devoted to civilian police affairs. As the novel opens, March has been called to the grounds of the Schwanenwerder causeway in suburban Berlin. A cadet at the Sepp Dietrich Academy, out for an early morning jog, has found an elderly man's corpse in the shallow waters of the shore of Lake Havel.
March is cynical - dangerously so - about the Reich and its transformation of German society, but he is a dedicated investigator, so he is conscientious in pursuing what seems to be an unremarkable missing persons case. But it turns out that the deceased man is a former high-ranking official in the Nazi party, someone who was involved in the party from its earliest days. A man with connections to other, very influential, people.
Soon enough, there are orders from the Kriminalpolizei bureaucracy that the upper echelons of the Gestapo will handle the investigation themselves. But March is stubborn, choosing to ignore the red flags out of detestation for the Gestapo general, the loathsome Odile Globocnik. Staying one step ahead of Globocnik, March discovers that the dead man was involved in a criminal enterprise that, should word of it be exposed to the public, greatly would embarrass the Party, and the Fuhrer, on the eve of the latter's birthday.
Aided by an American journalist named Charlotte Maguire, who is in Berlin as a representative of World European Features to cover the celebration of the Fuhrer's birthday, March digs even deeper into the workings of the inner circle of the Reich. But time is running out for March, and if he fails, any chance for ending the Nazi domination of Europe fails with him.......
'Fatherland' is a Three-Star novel. It starts off as a very readable, well-plotted mystery, with a believable portrayal of Berlin as the capital of a Nazi empire, its streets overwhelmed by massive Brutalist architecture, and the heraldry of the Reich. Author Harris also is good at depicting a society steeped in the doctrines of National Socialism, where the state surveils its citizens and shows no hesitation in crushing dissent.
Where the book falters is in its Big Revelation, which I suspect most, if not all, readers will see coming well in advance. As a result, as the second half of the novel ladles out one divulgence after another, these inevitably have a perfunctory quality.
As well, the denouement, which goes on for over 50 pages, generates suspense by having the lead characters make stupid decisions, never a good tactic in composing a storyline. By the time I got to the closing chapters a tiredness was permeating the narrative, and I found the conclusion more than a little predictable.
Summing up, 'Fatherland' is a competent, is not overly imaginative, 'Hitler Wins' novel.
Friday, May 2, 2025
May is 'Third Reich Triumphant' month
May is 'Third Reich Triumphant' Month at the PorPor Books Blog
Here at the PorPor Books Blog, occasionally we like to devote a month to providing reviews and profiles of books that deal with a particular topic. For May 2025, we're going to focus on science fiction and alternate history works that posit a victory by the Third Reich in the Second World War.
(I had to be careful in phrasing this topic, so as to avoid being flagged for promoting 'Nazi' or 'extremist' content online)
It's been 80 years since May, 1945, when the Reich came crashing down in the ruins of Berlin. However, what if the Reich had avoided destruction, and persevered ?
We'll be looking at an anthology of 'Hitler Wins' stories, as well as three novels that present a world in which the Third Reich holds sway over Europe. All works designed to shock, appall, and provoke !
Get ready for a triumphant Third Reich, all month here at the PorPor Books Blog !
Wednesday, April 30, 2025
Recycling visual motifs
Sunday, April 27, 2025
Book Review: War is Heaven
Thursday, April 24, 2025
At the library sale April 2025
Sunday, April 20, 2025
Re-read: Starhammer
Friday, April 18, 2025
'Heavy Metal' movie soundtrack album
Tuesday, April 15, 2025
Playboy April 1974
Saturday, April 12, 2025
Book Review: Prison Ship (M. Caidin)
‘Prison Ship’ (596 pp.) is a thick chunk of a paperback, and features cover art by David Mattingly. It was published by Tor Books in April 1989.
‘Prison Ship’ features three main characters; two human, and one alien. The main human character is Jake Marden, a sort of secular Jewish version of Doc Savage, but with a fondness for committing crimes, not deterring them. The other character is a Bad Azz Mofo black man named Jube Bailey. Jake and Jube meet up in Old Millford Prison, a state penitentiary located in Florida. Jake and Jube, by virtue of their physical size, ferociousness, and intelligence, take command of the prison and turn it into their own unique criminal enterprise.
The third character is an alien named Arbok; once a hotshot interstellar pilot, Arbok has been convicted of murder and is sentenced, along with five other aliens, to certain death as a slave laborer on a prison planet in a galaxy far, far away. Arbok leads an insurrection aboard the Frarsk, the prison ship of the book’s title, and commandeers the vessel to a distant galaxy and one of its few habitable planets: Earth.
Arbok and Jake establish a quasi-telepathic link and soon the Frarsk touches down on the grounds of Old Millford. What happens when six homicidal aliens team up with a small army of homicidal earthmen ? Nothing good, that’s clear. There will be VERY little singing of ‘Kumbaya’ around the fire and heartfelt messages about Peace, Love, and Multicultural Understanding. There WILL be plenty of violence and atrocities.
As an action novel, ‘Prison Ship’ starts off with plenty of velocity; the first 38 pages contain more mayhem and intrigue than entire novels by other thriller writers. But after that, the book begins to lose steam. It’s too long by at least 200 pages (if not more) and suffers from uneven pacing, too many filler passages, utterly contrived plotting, and pulp-worthy dialogue. I finished the book wondering if the Baen editor assigned to handle it actually did anything more than simply sign off on the publishing contract.
‘Prison Ship’’s splatterpunk content is liberal. These semi-pornographic passages are offset by star / asterisk symbols so that squeamish readers can skip them. In my mind these passages could have been deleted without harming the novel all that much. But again, Caidin seems to have been adamant about being Transgressive, so the splatterpunk stuff crops up at regular intervals.
If you’re a fan of splatterpunk, and you can tolerate a meandering, plodding narrative if it delivers plenty of sarcastic, gruesome humor, then ‘Prison Ship’ will be your cup of tea.


























