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The Washington Post
I once heard a master of suspense say that the craft was actually quite simple: Take a perfectly normal situation, a trope readers know well, then throw in a wild "what if?"…It's a lesson Francine Mathews seems to have learned well. Her Jack 1939 is most assuredly a work of fiction, but it takes skeins of history we all know well—Churchill's England, Hitler's Germany, Roosevelt's White House, the rise of the Kennedy family fortunes—and ravels a hair-raising tale…Mathews's ability to weave fact into her tale is nothing short of remarkable.—Marie Arana
Overview
In "one of the most deliciously high-concept thrillers imaginable" (The New Yorker) a young JFK travels to Europe on a secret mission for President Roosevelt
It’s the spring of 1939, and the prospect of war in Europe looms large. The United States has no intelligence service. In Washington, D.C., President Franklin Roosevelt may run for an unprecedented third term and needs someone he can trust to find out what the Nazis are up to. His ...