Code Name Edelweiss + Giveaway

“What I am looking for–what I desperately need, Mrs. Weiss–is a spy.”

Adolf Hitler is still a distant rumble on the horizon, but a Jewish spymaster and his courageous spies uncover a storm of Nazi terror in their own backyard.

In the summer of 1933, a man named Adolf Hitler is the new and powerful anti-Semitic chancellor of Germany. But in Los Angeles, no-nonsense secretary Liesl Weiss has concerns much closer to home. The Great Depression is tightening its grip and Liesl is the sole supporter of two children, an opinionated mother, and a troubled brother.

Leon Lewis is a Jewish lawyer who has watched Adolf Hitler’s rise to power–and the increase in anti-Semitism in America–with growing alarm. He believes Nazi agents are working to seize control of Hollywood, the greatest propaganda machine the world has ever known. The trouble is, authorities scoff at his dire warnings.

When Liesl loses her job at MGM, her only choice is to work with Leon Lewis and the mysterious Agent Thirteen to spy on her friends and neighbors in her German American community. What Leon Lewis and his spies find is more chilling–and more dangerous–than any of them suspected.

Code Name Edelweiss is based on a true story, unknown until recent years: How a lone Jewish lawyer and a handful of amateur spies discovered and foiled Adolf Hitler’s plan to take over Hollywood.

My Review:

Well, now that I’ve read Code Name Edelweiss, I have no idea why I procrastinated reading it! I was so wary because of the Hollywood setting that I kept talking myself out of picking it up from my TBR pile but, once I finally did…wow!

What an emotionally impactful read! And at such an interesting time in world history. Landsem really brings the Pre World War Two, Depression Era setting to life. Hitler is coming into power in Germany but German American Liesl’s worries are much closer to home: how to keep her family fed and housed after she loses her secretarial job at MGM studios. Her scrappy determination finds her employed as a spy for a Jewish lawyer who is worried that anti-semitism is on the rise among the disenfranchised in Los Angeles.

Liesl doesn’t believe that Nazi sentiments are prevalent in her community, but jobs are scarce and the pay is generous so she goes undercover at the German social club. Another spy has already infiltrated the group, the mysterious Agent Thirteen, and we get portions of the story from his point of view and spend a good part of the book not knowing his real identity which is such an intriguing plot twist.

Liesl soon discovers that there is a sinister underbelly to the social club. Nazi sympathizers are gathering forcesa nd plotting their own homegrown operation. Especially chilling since this is based on fact – Lawyer Leon Lewis and his anti-Nazi spy ring did actually thwart the American Nazi movement.

A cloak-and-dagger suspense paired with complicated family dynamics create an angsty page-turning read. But what really struck me was Liesl’s personal growth. I didn’t actually like her in the beginning. There were choices she made that I found hard to understand and her willingness to just ignore any ‘unpleasantness’ like that would make it go away was infuriating. But she’s on a journey of self-discovery and learns some gut wrenching lessons before she finally finds her voice. If not me, who? If not now, when?