The Kingdom of Ashes

The Kingdom of Ashes

by RobertEdric (Author)

Synopsis

The scene is set in Germany, spring 1946. The Nuremberg Trials are underway. Three hundred miles north, in the Rehstadt Institute, a British Assessment and Evaluation centre, Alex Foster interrogates a succession of lesser war criminals, exploring their pasts and their crimes, and deciding their futures in the soon-to-be-reborn Germany. But Rehstadt, a town largely untouched by the war, is a place of old hostilities and burnished hatreds; a place still not entirely at peace; a place where the certainties of the past are still weighed favourably against the deprivations of the present and the vague, uncertain promises of the future. As spring progresses, and as events in the wider world quicken to their own closely observed conclusion, Alex Foster finds himself at the centre of a conflict involving British, American and German interests; and for the first time in his career he also finds himself compromised - forced into subterfuge and deceit as he struggles to weigh personal convictions and loyalties against the greater political and military good...

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 352
Publisher: Doubleday
Published: 01 Aug 2007

ISBN 10: 0385612567
ISBN 13: 9780385612562
Book Overview: The astonishing new novel from one of the UK's finest literary writers

Media Reviews
Edric's work constitutes one of the most astonishing bodies of work to have appeared from a single author for a generation. - Daily Telegraph There aren't many novelists whose new book I would read without question, but I would read a new novel by Robert Edric.... A great novelist. - Spectator From the Trade Paperback edition.
Author Bio
Robert Edric was born in 1956. His novels include Winter Garden (1985 James Tait Black Prize winner), A New Ice Age (1986 runner-up for the Guardian Fiction Prize), A Lunar Eclipse, The Earth Made of Glass, Elysium, In Desolate Heaven, The Sword Cabinet, The Book of the Heathen (shortlisted for the 2001 WH Smith Literary Award), Peacetime (longlisted for the Booker Prize 2002) and Gathering the Water (longlisted for the Booker Prize 2006).