Publishers Weekly
(Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
It-s 1940, and Adm. Wilhelm Canaris, head of German military intelligence, believes the SS is plotting with Japan to weaponize a deadly virus discovered by German missionaries in central Africa. Canaris may be pro-German, but he-s also antigenocide, so he orders fixer Helmut Haller (British spy Capt. Jeremy Floyd), and his -niece,- Ursula (his apprentice, 16-year-old Jewish orphan Sarah Goldstein), to bring him the missionaries and their research, thus removing the disease from play. Accompanied by their Afro-German maid, Clementine, and French-born black priest Claude, Jeremy and Sarah chase rumors of a plague-spreading -White Devil- to the Congo basin, where they find Professor Rudolf Bofinger; his stepdaughter, Dr. Lisbeth Fischer; and an illness dubbed -the Bleeding.- Unbeknownst to them, their mission is far from finished. Killeen-s shattering follow-up to Orphan Monster Spy explores Nazism-s roots, the atrocities of colonialism, and the human cost of war. Though those unfamiliar with both WWII history and the preceding novel may have difficulty following the plot-s intricacies, Killeen delivers an action-packed, emotionally eviscerating tale. Ages 12-up. (Jan.)
School Library Journal
(Fri Nov 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)
Gr 10 Up-In the even-more-gripping sequel to Orphan Monster Spy , it's 1940 and 16-year-old Jewish orphan Sarah Goldstein is living undercover in Berlin as the "niece" of high-society fixer Helmut Haller, the alias of British spy Jeremy Floyd. Jeremy and Sarah are still reeling from the aftermath of the previous book's events, which left them both with PTSD and increased Sarah's fear that fighting monsters may just turn her into one. But there is no time for recovery now that rumors of a powerful germ weapon being developed in the Congo have reached Berlin. Posing as German military intelligence, Jeremy and Sarah set off on a race across Africa to beat the S.S. from retrieving the disease samples from German missionaries. Accompanying them is Clementine, a brilliant and acerbic half-German, half-Senegalese maid with a hidden agenda. In the Congo, people speak of a White Devil that travels through the jungle and spreads a fatal disease called "the bleeding," which missionaries claim they are trying to treat. Sarah gradually makes the agonizing realization that she (still) can trust no oneand that the Nazis are far from the only monsters out there. This installment retains the breakneck pace, rich imagery, and psychological nuance of the first book, while upping the stakes and increasing the moral complexity that confronts Sarah. The book's historical setting and subject matteratrocities perpetuated by European colonialists in Africa leading up to and during World War IIare both well handled and rarely depicted in YA, making this a strong purchase for high school collections. While the Ebola germ weapon is fictional, broader observations about colonial-era treatment of African populations and specific references to torture and genocide in the Belgian Congo and German Namibia are based in historical fact, and described in a lengthy author's note. African characters are depicted as individuals with their own histories and goals rather than as mere objects of European brutality. The German language is heavily used and the complex plot demands some background knowledge about the war from readers, as well as a familiarity with the events of the first book. VERDICT This smart, chilling page-turner of a spy thriller set in central Africa will have strong crossover appeal to adult audiences. A first purchase. Elizabeth Giles, Lubuto Library Partners, Zambia