
A SNEAK PEEK At MY FIRST NOVEL
I know many of you already have read my first novel, “Nebraska Doppleganer,” but for those who have asked me about basic premise, here is a peek at what the book is about — a synopsis of the first five chapters. All my books have been put into e-book format.
This novel is based upon true incidents in World War II. There really were Americans who were scooped up and drafted into the military, not only by the Germans, but by the Italians, and Japanese. My hero, John Krauss, sees the war from both sides of the war.
Chapter 1:
Newspaper woman Cindy Krauss of Lincoln, Neb., learns that her 85-year-old grandfather, John Krauss, has a secret he wants to share, but she must come to his home in Kearney, Neb.
When she arrives, the old man begins telling her about his past. His parents were native born Germans with sympathies toward Hitler during World War II, so much so that he was taken to Berlin to go to college, but ended up in uniform and became assigned to Field Marshall Erwin Rommel’s Afrika Korps.
Chapter 2:
John Krauss begins telling his granddaughter his life’s story in the hope that she will write it correctly. He begins telling her about German-American society in the United States during the first part of the 20th century. He tells her about how his father took him to the Berlin Olympics in 1936 for his high school graduation present. John described the atmosphere of cosmopolitan Berlin with its bright red bannered swastikas hanging from nearly every building. The young man is approached by a Gestapo agent, who informs him that because John’s father is still a German citizen, the young man also is considered a citizen of the Fatherland. He is instructed to immediately register for the Wehrmacht (German armed forces).
Chapter 3:
John enrolls at Berlin University, begins to witness the rough-handed antics of the SS, and meets a new friend, Greta von Carlsen. John is forced to register for the draft before he’s allowed to begin his classes. Despite an age difference of about 10 years, Greta invites him to have a drink with her after school, and later offers to rent him a room in her sprawling suburban home. As it turns out, Greta, though born in Germany, immigrated to the United States before returning and marrying. Her husband, a noted aristocrat and flier, was killed in a mysterious plane crash during a Luftwaffe test.
Once in Greta’s home, he meets a friend of Greta’s, Major Dieter Zeis of the German army.
Chapter 4:
John explains a bit of history to his granddaughter, telling her how the world was much different in the late 1930s compared to the 21st century. He recalled how his parents sent him $50 each month for his living expenses, and that living in Greta’s house brought with it much curiosity. This woman had a secret side to her. Was Major Zeis just a friend or a lover? Were either or both of them Nazis?
Much to his surprise, young John Krauss becomes Greta’s lover as she begins slipping into his bed in the middle of the night.
One of his questions was soon answered when he discovers Greta is a British agent who sends radio messages to London nearly every night.
Major Zeis is her brother-in-law and not a lover, nor is he a Nazi. On the contrary, it would appear much of Greta’s information was coming from the major.
One weekend, the three take a motor trip south to Munich where Greta goes to a nearby village called Dachau to check out a rumor.
Back in Berlin, John discovers a little bit of America at the Chicago Hofbrau where he can get a real hamburger and a coke.
Chapter 5:
John Krauss explains the various components and makeup of Hitler’s Wehrmacht and what it was like being a part of an invading force. He explained how after World War I the League of Nations was formed and how it failed, and how the Treaty of Versailles caused many of the problems that triggered the war in Europe.
John recalls being drafted into the Germany army and Major Zeis arranges for him to become a corporal in the medical corps assigned to his Medical Supply Depot. John then meets Sergeant Werner Schroeder, who is in charge of the staff and daily routine at the depot.
If you like what you’ve read so far, you can down-load the e-book format for $2.99 each at the Kindle Store of Amazon.com, or a my personal web site: www.oldwarriorbooks.com. The sequel to this book is “Secret At Beckham Manor.”
I hope you’ll give it a try and, forgive this shameless self-promotion.
Merry Christmas,
Tom Morrow
quotetaker@msn.com

