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Postmark Berlin

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From two-time winner of the Arthur Ellis Award comes a new mystery that will keep readers guessing along with Collins and Burke. From Halifax, Nova Scotia all the way to Berlin, Germany, Father Brennan Burke searches for answers in the murder of a parishioner and finds that she was a woman with many secrets in her past.

Father Brennan Burke is coming off a rough stint in Belfast and he's been trying to obliterate those memories with drink ever since. His troubles intensify when the body of one of his parishioners washes up on the beach in Halifax. Meika Keller came to Canada after escaping through the Berlin Wall. Now a Canadian military officer is charged with her murder. Defence lawyer Monty Collins argues that her death was suicide. That's the last thing Father Burke wants to hear. Guilty of neglecting his duties as a priest when Meika needed him most, Brennan feels compelled to uncover whatever prompted her cry for help and led to her death.

He suspects that the answer lies overseas. But nothing could have prepared him for the events that unfold when he flies to Germany to investigate the case. In the midst of all this, Brennan and Monty must deal with conflicts between the two of them, which arose out of their time in Belfast and have yet to be resolved.

About the Collins-Burke Mysteries

This multi-award-winning series is centred around two main characters who have been described as endearingly flawed: Monty Collins, a criminal defence lawyer who has seen and heard it all, and Father Brennan Burke, a worldly, hard-drinking Irish-born priest. The priest and the lawyer solve mysteries together, but sometimes find themselves at cross-purposes, with secrets they cannot share: secrets of the confessional, and matters covered by solicitor-client confidentiality. The books are notable for their wit and humour, and their depiction of the darker side of human nature ― characteristics that are sometimes combined in the same person, be it a lawyer, a witness on the stand, or an Irish ballad singer who doubles as a guerrilla fighter in the Troubles in war-torn Belfast. In addition to their memorable characters, the books have been credited with a strong sense of place and culture, meticulous research, crisp and authentic dialogue, and intriguing plots. The novels are set in Nova Scotia, Ireland, England, Italy, New York, and Germany. The series begins with Sign of the Cross (2006) and continues to the most recent installment, Postmark Berlin (2020).

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 30, 2020
      At the start of Arthur Ellis Award–winner Emery’s gripping 11th Collins-Burke mystery (after 2018’s Though the Heavens Fall), Fr. Brennan Burke gets a visit from his bishop in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The bishop berates Burke for having been drunk the night before and forgetting to meet with a parishioner, Meika Keller, who wanted to talk to him. Meika’s body had washed up on a Halifax beach that morning. Alban MacNair, a neighbor of Meika who was seen arguing with her, is charged with her murder. Burke’s lawyer friend, Monty Collins, who defends MacNair in court, says that it’s a case of suicide. Feeling guilty, Burke sets out to discover what happened to Meika. Guided by a postcard showing the former East German Stasi headquarters sent to Meika with a Berlin postmark, Burke travels to what was once East Berlin, from where Meika claimed to have escaped with her young daughter in 1974. The roller-coaster ride to learn who Meika was and what led to her death will keep the reader guessing along with Burke and Collins. Fans of analytic detective stories will be pleased.

    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2020
      In 1996, a wayward priest and a determined lawyer work in parallel to explain an apparent suicide in Halifax. When Father Brennan Burke, rector of Saint Bernadette's, awakens painfully from partying too heartily, he learns how badly he let down one of his parishioners. He was supposed to have met Meika Keller the night before, but he missed their appointment, and early that morning, her body washed up on the beach at Point Pleasant Park. Meika had no obvious reason to drown herself; she was witty and personable, a respected professor of physics at the university, a tireless patron of the arts whose marriage was apparently happy. She was also a refugee from Leipzig, from which she had escaped 22 years earlier, with tragic consequences. Meika's widower, Commodore Hubert Rendell, Commander Canadian Fleet, and their two children are devastated by her death. The evidence from the autopsy and a witness implicates Lt. Col. Alban MacNair, who claims to have had a flirtation with Meika and who's now charged with her murder. It's not clear whether he wanted more or she did, but she was seen running from his car with him in pursuit, and her blood was on his glove. Attorney Monty Collins, Burke's estranged friend, undertakes MacNair's defense. Amid subplots about music, little history lectures, and flashbacks to an earlier installment (Though the Heavens Fall, 2018), Burke tries to figure out why a seemingly innocuous postcard from Berlin with a photo of the old Stasi headquarters sent Meika on a trip to Europe--and not for the reason she gave Rendell. A guilt-wracked Burke, hoping to make amends and trying to clear his own name, travels to Germany to learn more about the Meika he thought he knew. A surprising confession from a Canadian officer who's been stalking Burke in Germany puts Meika in a new, disturbing, and heart-wrenching light. Sympathetic characters, a complex plot, and a slew of details of questionable relevance.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:840
  • Text Difficulty:4-5

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