Cover Image: V2

V2

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I always enjoy Robert Harris books. This wartime novel s a skilful blend of historical figures and facts. The author's descriptive powers make is very easy to imagine that you are there. Tremendous research from Robert Harris and his fascination for the German war machine as they desperately launch their V weapons at the end of hostilities. A very good book. Usual Robert Harris

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I have enjoyed many of Robert Harris's books, ever since Fatherland was published. And I seem to enjoy his fiction most. That said, his research into historical fact, and the way he weaves it into his novels is to be admired. So, I looked forward to a WW2 fact-based story about the V2 rocket.

The story involves a young WAAF and her job in Belgium, tracking the rocket launches, and a German scientist who helped Von Braun design the V2. The story then moves ahead to their subsequent move to America after the war, and their part in the space race. All this is based on fact.

The background details nicely paint a picture of the period, of the fears and hopes of people caught up in the final days of the war, and the attempts by America to clandestinely move many German scientists to America. We get a story of ordinary people, caught up in exceptional times, and forced to make choices they could later regret.

As the story progresses we see how America (mainly) used the V2 programme and its scientists to further their own ends and gain the lead in the space race.

Not my favourite Harris book, but a wonderful tale, and worth your time.

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Excellent, pacy thriller that delivers everything you’d expect from Robert Harris. Effectively covering five days in the escalating use of the V2 rockets, V2 is told from the alternating perspective of a German engineer involved in their development and a WAAF officer supporting the effort to identify where they originate from (and to stop them). Explores interesting avenues of the purity of science vs its application, reality vs propaganda and of the changing role of women in male-dominated society, without being preachy, and addresses the human cost of war, occupation and random rocket attacks simply but effectively.

I read over a day, thoroughly enthralling.

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I like Robert Harris’ historical novels, they are well researched, bring the characters to life and are an easy read. V2 is set at the end of WW2 as the SS step up the launches of V2 rockets at London in a last endeavour to turn the tide of the war.

Rudi Graf is a rocket scientist and engineer working at the missile launch site in occupied Holland. The narrative flashes back to his youth and his friendship with Wernher von Braun and their shared passion for rockets and space travel.

Kay Caton-Walsh is a WAAF officer posted to Belgium as part of desperate attempt to find the launch sites and destroy them by reverse calculating the path of the V2s as they launch and subsequently land in London.

While Graf is increasingly doubting the morality and sanity of his masters, the British realise that their operation in Belgium may be compromised.

V2 is not Harris’ best novel (my favourites are the Cicero trilogy) but if you like the minutiae of WW2 military stuff then you will enjoy this.

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Who can you trust? War always has two sides.
Kay Caton-Walsh has survived a V2 attack and is now a WAAF. She is working in Belguim locating launch sites.
Rudi Graf worked on the building of the V2 and is now launching these leathal weapns at London.
Both of them are working towards the end of the war but who will win?

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Rudi Graf wanted to send rockets to the moon, but instead is drafted into creating the V2 rocket. Hitler creates a rocket programme of 10,000 missiles in the winter of 1944, hoping to win the war through bombing major cities in the UK and liberated territories. Graf leads the programme, but becomes increasingly disillusioned with it.

On the other side of the missile is Kay Caton-Walsh, survivor of a rocket attach, who becomes part of a unit of the Women's Auxiliary Air Force to be sent to Belgium to track the rocket trajectory and destroy the launch sites.

Robert Harris tracks back and forth between Graf and Caton-Walsh, and tells a morally ambivalent tale, of how the Allied Forces used the V2 programme after the war for their own ends - as well as the scientists who built it. At the same time, he tells the story of the ordinary citizens, whether in London or Belgium, trying to live in extraordinary times - and how some got caught up in situations where their moral compass was deeply compromised.

It's a thrilling race to the end, but it's more than that. Harris, like John le Carré, questions the assumptions of thrillers set in war-time (including the Cold War), and swerves nationalism to tell a more textured and nuanced tale of murky moral compromise on both sides. Lastly, the details sing in the novel, as do the settings in the UK, Germany and Belgium. They just feel right. A superlative piece of work.

With thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for an advance copy.

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Another super fact based story from this master novelist based on the story of the V2 rocket with details of its launch and the results of its landing on London. On the English side we have a young WAAF and her tale of landing in Belgium to assist in tracking the rocket. On the German side the tale of one of the scientists who helped his friend Von Braun design the weapon and their subsequent move after the war to America and the space race.The mundane details of life give a wonderful sense of time and the pace never flags up to the main characters meeting at the end and the unanswered question of was it a short meeting or something else. Superb!

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Nobody writes thrillers set during WW2 better than Robert Harris. V2 is even better than Enigma. Much better.
The young German scientists working at Peenemunde had dreams of building rockets to fly to the moon. Hitler had them using their skills to send rockets to destroy London.
Cleverly combining fact and fiction Robert Harris has written a thriller that gives his characters on both sides the empathy needed to make this book work.
V2 has all the tension and suspense of The Riddle of the Sands. No doubt, like that classic this thriller will also still be being read in over an hundred years time.
Superb.

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V2 is a wonderful novel. Completely fantastic. Harris’s style is effortless and intimate, leading the reader not just to the site of the action but into it through the delight of the characters bringing the story to life. Set in November 1944, Europe was in its sixth year of the Second World War. In the summer that year, Allied forces had broken out of the Normandy Beachheads and began pushing East through Europe. Events were beginning to turn irrevocably in favour of the Allies and Hitler would commit suicide in five months’ time. German morale was low and they needed success from their wonder weapon, the V2 rocket. Firing these from the Dutch forests rained vengeance on London.

Robert Harris is a master at bringing history to life with vivid description and most importantly, through such rich and endearing characters taking the reader right to the heart of the action. The humanity in the story leaves us rooting for characters in both the British and German sides, with the plucky British heroine, Section Officer A. V. Kay Caton-Walsh – “Kay” – stoically determined to play her part in the war and locate the launch site of the V2 rockets in the Dutch forests, countered by the idealist Dr Rudi Graf who dreamed of developing of rocket travel to the moon, but is struggling with the destructive output from the V2 programme and the gruelling intensity of the launches.

The description of a V2 rocket strike, hitting Chancery Lane in London, seemed particularly vivid for me as I’ve worked in an office in that lovely part of London. It felt voyeuristic reading the chilling five minutes of flight after launch, travelling at nearly three times the speed of sound, Harris has the reader doing the literary equivalent of hiding behind the sofa – the scene shifting from rocket launch, switching to an ordinary day in London life, back to rocket in flight, with the inevitability of the strike hitting the characters being watched. The vulnerability and bravery of Londoners who had survived the Blitz becomes clear as they have to face a new fear of the V2 rocket - terrifyingly real and chilling.

Harris paints additional colour into the story with a wide cast of supporting characters, such as the creepy womanising Wing Commander Leslie Starr – whose hands earn him the nick-name “wandering Starr” who is happily countered by the brilliantly intimidating matriarchal Flight Officer Sitwell with whom most people and their attitudes do not in fact… sit well. On the German side, Sturmscharführer Biwack from the National Socialist Leadership Office joins the V2 launch team in order to “boost their morale” and gives such a sense of immediate threat and fear with his Gestapo SS position that many times throughout the book, I stopped to draw breath, realising that the freedoms we enjoy today, take for granted today, were won by many brave men and women, on both sides of the war, fighting for these beliefs and values.

This is a powerful story, told expertly through a rich platoon of characters and draws compassion for both sides. V2 is a wonderful tale of Victory and Vengeance. I highly recommend it.

(Guest reviewer - my husband!)

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What can I say, apart from this is such a great read!!

The story is told from two differing points of view, on the British side you have Kay Caton-Walsh, as WAAF officer who has a top secret job and also knows the effects of the V2, and on the German side you have Graf an engineer, who with his friend helps to develop the science behind the V2, although he eventually becomes discouraged by the German war machine.

There is a lot of technical talk, maths etc, but please do not let this put you off the story, everything does get clearer.

The book has been thoroughly and comprehensively researched and some elements of the story are just heart breaking, the description of the enslaved labour for example. Also learnt something, never knew the pre runner for space travel was the V2!

Highly recommended

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This is Robert Harris at his best. Hitler is desperate and is persuaded towards the end of the war to authorise the building of V2 rockets to be fired from Belgium to London. The story starts with one successfully finding its target in London, affecting the life off a young female officer destined to become involved in the attempt to track down the source of the V2 missions. The detail of the building and use of the weapons by the
Germans is superbly well researched. Dr Rudi Graf is an engineer who hoped to devise moon rockets but finds himself developing the V2s instead. He is a very well drawn character, intrigued by the opportunity to use his professional engineering skills but troubled by the damage he knows his work is creating. The story takes turn about being in the German side then the British. It is excellent reading. Then the two themes come to an ending with a suggestion that an element of love might be possible. This is a fascinating insight into the ambivalent views of some Germans and a rewarding read. I recommend it.

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Fantastic book! I have always enjoyed Mr Harris’s books but this book really stands out as it grabbed me from the first paragraph and held me captive until the last. The story line was fresh, Mr Harris clearly researched the history very throughly which added many small details that makes the book so interesting. The characters are fully developed, for me a real mark of a master author. The locations are brilliantly drawn for you, the whole of the book is so well crafted that the story stays will you long after you finish the book. For me this is a very special read giving you an insight to a time of terror. This is a must read.

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A gripping read right from the start. It was very well paced and I would recommend it. Fans of Robert Harris don’t want to miss this one!

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Another great combination of historical fact and fiction by Robert Harris. The story revolves around the V2 bombs fired by the Germans in WWII, with one half of the story based around one of the scientists who developed the bombs and the other half around a WAAF officer who is part of a team trying to locate the launch sites. It rattles along and if you’ve enjoyed other of his works, I think you’d also enjoy this,

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Normally I don't like novels where there is so much technology. However it works very well in this one. Basically there are 2 parallel stories which flank the development and use of the V2 bomb. The technicalities about the bomb, slow the pace of the characterisation and background to the plot. The two characters are well developed and Harris manages the difficult job of making the German scientist who is one of the main characters, fairly sympathetic. That I didn't really understand the science, didn't take from my enjoyment of the book.

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A Fascinating blend of fact and fiction. Great page turner and insight into the late war effort from both sides. Would rate 5 star, gave a great understanding of how technical World War 2 was. Thoroughly enjoyable read and would definitely recommend.

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This is a highly informative and detailed story of the deadly V2 rockets deployed by the Nazis in the closing stages of the war. It is told from the perspective of Kay, a WAAF officer, who with other women, is flown into Belgium in an effort to trace the launch site of the rockets, using their advanced mathematical skills. The other perspective is from Dr Graf the engineer/ scientist who is a German civilian, but has been co opted by the Nazis onto the development/ launch team for the V2s, not entirely willingly.
I have to say I found much of Dr Graf’s chapters very technical, and with many Nazi and SS officers of varying ranks and positions, from various sectors of the German war machine, the content was sometimes a challenge to mentally assimilate.
The opening chapters were utterly chilling, the description of the V2 rocket landing on London, and the resulting carnage was distressing to read, especially as we know that this part is a factual account.
The race to detect where the launch site might be, so it could be destroyed, is the main thrust of the story from a British point of view. From the German side, it is a huge push, despite the terrible human cost, to deploy as many rockets to land in London in as short a time as possible, before their launch location is discovered.
Kay’s story is fairly lightweight by comparison to Graf’s, her character is not explored in any great depth, but it portrays the role of the WAAFs in WW2 and shows how their specific skills were invaluable to the Allies.
I learned so much recent history by reading this book, although it was pretty depressing to contemplate at times. The writing is impeccable, as expected from this author. A thought provoking book with an unusual theme, I would recommend it.

My thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for my advance copy of this title.

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Hi Folks
This was an excellent read. The story involved the Rocket Scientists responsible for the V2 rockets as well as the WAAF officers that tried to identify the launch sites. Particularly poignant was the mention of Longbridge Road Barking. Barking was where I lived in 1945.

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This book is so well researched the authenticity shines through. The story is told from both sides of the channel. For the British, it is Kay Caton-Walsh, a WAAF officer with a top secret job, who has first hand experience of the effects of the V2. For the Germans, Graf, an engineer, who with his friend Von Braun, were in at the beginning of the race to develop the rockets. This is so well written, it sets a great pace, and also makes you think. The consequences of the rockets development to both sides was immense, particularly the enslaved workforce. Atmospheric, each thread of the story beautifully woven into an authentic account of a tiny part of WWII that barely registered in any history lesson. Excellent read.

Thanks to netgalley and the publishers for an ARC in return for an honest review.

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Excellent fiction again from a terrific author combining both historical incidents and characters into an interesting story that also educates the reader about the reality and horror of war. I did feel the ending was rushed and would happily read more.

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