The Last Days

  • The third case for Inspector Oppenheimer: In the chaotic turmoil of the end of the war, Inspector Oppenheimer gets caught up in a conspiracy about the Nazis' atomic plans
  • "Life in devastated Berlin, the fall of Nazi rule and the turmoil that followed, which the author portrays in an exceedingly authentic way, are as important in this novel as the crime story about a smuggler whom Oppenheimer tracks down." - www.literaturkurier.de

Oppenheimer‘s third case

 

A gripping Second World War crime novel about the Nazi’s atomic plans. Berlin, late April 1945: Inspector Oppenheimer and his wife Lisa spend the last days of The Third Reich in a hideout belonging to the crook Ede. But they become separated in the chaotic turmoil of the defeat. When Oppenheimer sets out to track down one of Ede’s debtors who had gone missing, he unexpectedly receives information regarding Lisa’s rapist, the Russian deserter Grigorjew. He encounters a web of lies and deceptive manoeuvres, at the centre of which stands a suitcase with highly explosive content. Other powers are also after Grigorjew. It appears he is smuggling materials that play a role in the Nazi’s atomic plans. And Oppenheimer knows more about the affair than he initially thought.

  

"A novel that extremely excitingly combines contemporary history with the plot of a thriller." - Berliner Morgenpost

 

"(...) Excellently researched, engagingly written, the author dispenses with enticing clichés. [It] promises and delivers - a great reading pleasure." - General-Anzeiger

Contact Foreign Rights
Rights sold to

France: Kero; Greece: Metaichmio; Italy: Emons; Japan: Shueisha

  • Publisher: Knaur TB
  • Release: 02.05.2017
  • ISBN: 978-3-426-51644-7
  • 560 Pages
  • Series: Ein Fall für Kommissar Oppenheimer
  • Author: Harald Gilbers
The Last Days
Harald Gilbers The Last Days
Ronald Hansch
© Ronald Hansch
Harald Gilbers

Harald Gilbers, born 1970, studied English and History in Augsburg and Munich. He was a television editor before becoming a director for the theater. "Germania", his first novel, has been awarded the Glauser Prize for the best crime debut and in 2016, the French Prix Historia for “Odins Söhne” (Odin’s Sons). Odin’s Söhne has also been shortlisted for the Festival Polar Cognac Prize for the best international novel in 2016.