A Death in Vienna (Gabriel Allon, Bk 4)

A Death in Vienna (Gabriel Allon, Bk 4)
by Daniel Silva

A Death in Vienna (Gabriel Allon, Bk 4)
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Book Summary Information

Author: Daniel Silva
Edition: Mass Market Paperback
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published)
Published: 2005-02-01
ISBN: 0451213181
Number of pages: 400
Publisher: Signet

Book Reviews of A Death in Vienna (Gabriel Allon, Bk 4)

Book Review: ANTI CATHOLIC BOOK!! BEWARE!
Summary: 1 Stars

No practicing Catholic will want to read this anti-Catholic book. Silva may be a terrific writer, but in "A Death in Vienna" he reveals a clear bias against the Catholic church. For example, one character is a Catholic bishop only interested in hiding converted Jews from the Nazis.

"And those who weren't baptized?" (p 175) being the obvious question. Apparently they can be shipped off to the gas chambers.

And this is only one small example of Silva's slant. It's one slam against Catholicism after another throughout the book. Silva portrays the Vatican as being eager to help Nazis flee Europe after the war, and, in general, of siding with the Nazis.

This is a complete falsehood. Here are the facts:

Three years before Hitler was elected chancellor, Catholics were told that anyone who became a Nazi or who wore the Nazi uniform or flew the swastika would not be given the Eucharist. That's right. They were forbidden the sacraments, just as today politicians who promote abortion are denied the Eucharist. Documents in the Vatican show that the Nazis later pleaded for this excommunication to be removed.

The request was denied.

In the election that swept Hitler to power, the two Catholic areas of the country, Bavaria and the Rhineland, voted against, not for, Hitler. Which should surely not surprise anyone. Christianity, especially Catholicism, was being branded by the Nazis as the inheritor of the 'slave' religion Judaism.

The Nazis not only hated Catholicism, they actively promoted the occult and paganism. Nazis proclaimed the triumph of the strong, the Nietzschean superman, over the weak--the exact opposite of Christianity. They proclaimed the morality of eugenics. They legalized abortion and sterilized the mentally impaired. And yes, of course the church protested these clear evils vigorously then as she does today.

On Palm Sunday, 1937, a secret encyclical by the pope was smuggled to every
Catholic church in Germany, an encyclical to be read aloud that Sunday at Mass. It was a thunderous denunciation of the Nazis. "There is but one alternative left, that of heroism" ended the pope sadly.

And heroism it would require. Dachau had a entire cell block of Catholic
priests, most of whom would not survive. (A good book on this subject is 'Priestblock 25487, A Memoir of Dachau'.) Indeed, the Nazis murdered nearly every priest in Poland. The future Pope John Paul, then secretly, and illegally, in a seminary, would only escape by what some would call a miracle.

And as for the much maligned Pope Pius XII, the German historian Hesemann
recently released documents showing Pope Pius XII arranged for the escape of
200,000 Jews from Germany in the weeks after Kristallnacht alone. During the war convents, monasteries, and the Vatican itself were filled the brim with Jews being hidden from the Nazis. The New York Times actually thanked the pope for his treatment of the Jews.

Here are two good books on the subject: 'The Myth of Hitler's Pope', written by Orthodox Jewish Rabbi David Dalin and 'Before the Dawn' written by Eugenio Zolli, who was head of the Hebrew College of Rome. Zolli was the chief rabbi in Rome during the Nazi occupation of Rome. Obviously, he was in a position to know how the Vatican treated the Jews in Rome during the war. 'Before the Dawn' is the autobiography of his life during the war. It will utterly demolish any lingering doubts as to how the Catholic church, and the pope himself in particular, treated the Jews during the war.

And here is a quote Albert Einstein: "Being a lover of freedom, when the revolution came in Germany, I looked to the universities to defend it, knowing that they had always boasted of their devotion to the cause of truth; but, no, the universities immediately were silenced. Then I looked to the great editors of the newspapers whose flaming editorials in days gone by had proclaimed their love of freedom; but they, like the universities, were silenced in a few short weeks. Only the Church stood squarely across the path of Hitler's campaign for suppressing truth. I never had any special interest in the Church before, but now I feel a great affection and admiration because the Church alone has had the courage and persistence to stand for intellectual truth and moral freedom. I am forced thus to confess that what I once despised I now praise unreservedly."

Silva appears to know little, if anything, about Catholic theology regarding the church and Judaism. He doesn't know that Catholics consider themselves the fulfillment of Judaism. According to Catholic theology God did not end his sacred covenant to the Jews, he expanded it to include all the Gentiles, thus completing his promise that all the ten lost Jewish tribes--now too intermarried to be separated out--would be brought back together.

Silva doesn't know Catholics regard Jews as the best possible people that God, who is love itself, could have chosen as the firstborn among the children of God. The very best. Silva doesn't appear to understand Catholics believe the pope is the new high priest, that the entire sacrificial system and Levitical priesthood, which vanished from Judaism with the fall of the temple in Jerusalem in 70 AD, is believed by Catholics to continue in the Catholic church.

There is no doubt that there have been Catholics who, at times during the last two thousand years, have have treated our brothers in God, the Jews, with a horrifying lack of love, even with outright cruelty. This was a very great sin. There can be no excuse for such behavior, only remorse and repentance.

But Silva is simply wrong in his accusations at the church during World War II.

Summary of A Death in Vienna (Gabriel Allon, Bk 4)

A New York Times Bestselling Author

Art restorer and sometime spy Gabriel Allon is sent to Vienna to discover the truth behind a bombing which killed an old friend, but while there he encounters something that turns his world upside down. It is a face - a face that feels hauntingly familiar, yet chills him to the bone and sends him on an urgent hunt for a name, a history, a connection. This uncommonly intelligent thriller is filled with sharply etched characters and prose, and a plot of astonishing intricacy and resonance.


Product Description
Art restorer and sometime spy Gabriel Allon is sent to Vienna to investigate a bombing and uncovers a portrait of evil stretching across sixty years and thousands of lives-and into his own personal nightmares.

Amazon Exclusive Essay: Daniel Silva on Gabriel Allon and the "Accidental Series"

Writers tend to be solitary creatures. We toil alone for months on end, then, once a year, we emerge from our dens to publish a book. It can be a daunting experience, especially for someone like me, who is not gregarious and outgoing by nature. But there is one aspect of promotion I truly love: meeting my readers and answering their questions. During each stop on my book tour, I reserve the bulk of my time for a lively conversation with the audience. I learn much from these encounters-indeed, some of the comments are so insightful they take my breath away. There is one question I am asked each night without fail, and it remains my favorite: "How in the world did you ever think of Gabriel Allon?" The answer is complicated. In one sense, he was the result of a long, character-construction process. In another, he was a bolt from the blue. I'll try to explain.

In 1999, after publishing The Marching Season, the second book in the Michael Osbourne series, I decided it was time for a change. We were nearing the end of the Clinton administration, and the president was about to embark on a last-ditch effort to bring peace to the Middle East. I had the broad outlines of a story in mind: a retired Israeli assassin is summoned from retirement to track down a Palestinian terrorist bent on destroying the Oslo peace process. I thought long and hard before giving the Israeli a name. I wanted it to be biblical, like my own, and to be heavy with symbolism. I finally decided to name him after the archangel Gabriel. As for his family name, I chose something short and simple: Allon, which means "oak tree" in Hebrew. I liked the image it conveyed. Gabriel Allon: God's angel of vengeance, solid as an oak.

Gabriel's professional résumé-the operations he had carried out-came quickly. But what about his other side? What did he like to do in his spare time? What was his cover? I knew I wanted something distinct. Something memorable. Something that would, in many respects, be the dominant attribute of his character. I spent many frustrating days mulling over and rejecting possibilities. Then, while walking along one of Georgetown's famous redbrick sidewalks, my wife, Jamie, reminded me that we had a dinner date that evening at the home of David Bull, a man regarded as one of the finest art restorers in the world. I stopped dead in my tracks and raised my hands toward the heavens. Gabriel Allon was complete. He was going to be an art restorer, and a very good one at that.

Over my objections, the book was entitled The Kill Artist and it would go on to become a New York Times bestseller. It was not, however, supposed to be the first book in a long-running series. But once again, fate intervened. In 2000, after moving to G.P. Putnam & Sons, my new publishers asked me what I was working on. When I mumbled something about having whittled it down to two or three options, they offered their first piece of advice. They really didn't care what it was about, they just wanted one thing: Gabriel Allon.

I then spent the next several minutes listing all the reasons why Gabriel, now regarded as one of the most compelling and successful continuing characters in the mystery-thriller genre, should never appear in a second book. I had conceived him as a "one off" character, meaning he would be featured in one story and then ride into the sunset. I also thought he was too melancholy and withdrawn to build a series around, and, at nearly fifty years of age, perhaps a bit too old as well. My biggest concern, however, had to do with his nationality and religion. I thought there was far too much opposition to Israel in the world-and far too much raw anti-Semitism-for an Israeli continuing character ever to be successful in the long term.

My new publishers thought otherwise, and told me so. Because Gabriel lived in Europe and could pass as German or Italian, they believed he came across as more "international" than Israeli. But what they really liked was Gabriel's other job: art restoration. They found the two opposing sides of his character-destroyer and healer-fascinating. What's more, they believed he would stand alone on the literary landscape. There were lots of CIA officers running around saving the world, they argued, but no former Israeli assassins who spent their spare time restoring Bellini altarpieces.

The more they talked, the more I could see their point. I told them I had an idea for a story involving Nazi art looting during the Second World War and the scandalous activities of Swiss banks. "Write it with Gabriel Allon," they said, "and we promise it will be your biggest-selling book yet." Eventually, the book would be called The English Assassin, and, just as Putnam predicted, it sold twice as many copies as its predecessor. Oddly enough, when it came time to write the next book, I still wasn't convinced it should be another Gabriel novel. Though it seems difficult to imagine now, I actually conceived the plot of The Confessor without him in mind. Fortunately, my editor, Neil Nyren, saved me from myself. The book landed at #5 on the New York Times bestseller list and received some of the warmest reviews of my career. After that, a series was truly born.

I am often asked whether it is necessary to read the novels in sequence. The answer is no, but it probably doesn't hurt, either. For the record, the order of publication is The Kill Artist, The English Assassin, The Confessor, A Death in Vienna, Prince of Fire, The Messenger, The Secret Servant, and Moscow Rules, my first #1 New York Times bestseller. The Defector pits Gabriel in a final, dramatic confrontation with the Russian oligarch and arms dealer Ivan Kharkov, and I have been told it far surpasses anything that has come before it in the series. And to think that, if I'd had my way, only one Gabriel Allon book would have been written. I remain convinced, however, that had I set out in the beginning to create him as a continuing character, I would surely have failed. I have always believed in the power of serendipity. Art, like life, rarely goes according to plan. Gabriel Allon is proof of that.

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