From the Bookshelf of Espionage Aficionados

Find A Copy At

Group Discussions About This Book

No group discussions for this book yet.

What Members Thought

Scott Head
Aug 05, 2019 rated it it was amazing
Exceptional and riveting. The last days of the Reich and the slowly collapsing city of Berlin are a tense, gritty crucible. The Russians are closing in, ringing the once mighty city with fire and rape. John Russell, Berliner, American journalist, unwilling spy, has escaped, but his fiance, film star Effi Koenen, stayed behind to go under cover, seeking to protect and care for family. Wanted by the Gestapo, Effi manages a believable ruse, though one wrought with trials.

Rusell's son, Paul, now a s
...more
Eric_W
Jun 28, 2015 rated it really liked it
Shelves: spies, ww-ii
# 4 in the John Russell series. At the end of volume 3 in this excellent series, Russell had escaped to Sweden and Effi had returned to Berlin, hiding in plain sight disguised as an old woman by using her make-up and acting skills. Germany had just declared war on America and the Gestapo sought both of them. Fast forward to April, 1945. Paul, John’s son, is sixty miles from Berlin on the eastern front as part of a Panzerfaust unit as the eastern front shrinks, Effi is surviving but also working ...more
Elli
A really fine book. Setting is the very end of the world war 2 fighting in Germany, Berlin in particular. The family situation is complicated, but the hero and his de-facto wife have been separated for most of the war. He, a journalist, escaped after learning he was to be arrested, but she chose to stay and try to work underground to help others escape. In this sequel the war is ending, but the danger is definitely not. The hero must work with the Russians under cover in order to be able to find ...more
Cold War Conversations Podcast
I have really enjoyed the John Russell series for it's evocative atmosphere and attention to detail. My main criticism in Potsdam Station would be echoed by other reviewers in how much did people understand the power of the atomic bomb in May 1945 particularly a journalist.

The other rare mistake is this book mentions the street Clayallee which wasn't named as such until 1953 after the US Military governor of the US Zone of Occupation.
...more
Jeremiah Genest
Feb 21, 2012 rated it liked it
Shelves: spyfi
Not as good as the earlier novels, maybe I'm just suffering fatigue by this point, but I think its more likely the setting in midst of ther Soviet conquest of Berlin changed the atmsophere too much. I'm looking forward to the 5th bringing the series to the beginning of the cold war. ...more
Elke Erickson
Feb 23, 2011 rated it liked it
Cinnamon
Jul 01, 2011 rated it it was amazing
C
Sep 15, 2011 rated it really liked it
Shelves: 2011-reads
Francis Valletta
Feb 17, 2012 rated it really liked it
Scott E
Mar 20, 2012 marked it as to-read
Thomas
Oct 12, 2012 rated it really liked it
Peter Kavanagh
Nov 21, 2012 rated it really liked it
Shirley Conlin
Jul 16, 2013 rated it really liked it
Nooilforpacifists
Dec 22, 2013 rated it it was amazing
Mary
Feb 18, 2014 rated it really liked it
Philby
Apr 21, 2014 marked it as to-read
Anna
Jun 28, 2015 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Anthony Nuthall
Mar 01, 2018 marked it as to-read
Ian Walton
Oct 26, 2018 rated it really liked it
Brian Christy
Feb 05, 2021 marked it as to-read
Alberto
Oct 12, 2023 rated it really liked it
Hans Ostrom
Jun 02, 2023 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
David
Jul 13, 2023 marked it as to-read
Karan
Jun 26, 2025 marked it as to-read