Fifteen-year-old twin brothers Rudi and Peter Möser-Fleischmann come of age in a divided Berlin.
Short, dark-haired, stocky Rudi is a loyal follower of the East German communist government. Peter, who cleverly sees through the lies and longs for freedom, is tall, slender, and blond, the golden boy of both the family and the narrative. Politics and personal lives intertwine for the brothers as their family is split by the wall and by personal conflict, ideological differences, and mental illness. The author ambitiously attempts to tackle many issues, but the result is largely unsatisfying: The plot lags in the first half, the tone is unfortunately judgmental toward those who struggle with ideological brainwashing, and none of the characters grow significantly over the course of the story. Some of the lessons are impactful, such as not believing a government’s words without the actions to back them up and that life is complex, with many gray areas. A minor but effective plotline is the twins’ father’s struggle with his past as an enthusiastic Hitler Youth member. Readers will recognize contemporary commentary in the author’s criticism of anti-fascism. Yet, while East Germany is rightly criticized, Western capitalism, a subject that would have benefited from additional context and nuance, is presented as an obvious positive. Scattered full-page black-and-white illustrations give a sense of the 1961 setting.
Does not stand out in the crowded field of Cold War stories.
(historical note, map) (Historical fiction. 12-16)