When a man claiming to be a survivor of the Nazi death camps seeks out his family among Lotty Herschel’s circle of friends, he forces her to confront a memory from the war she has long refused to think about. As a frightened V I watches her longtime friend and mentor unravel, she comes to Lotty’s help in the only way she know how—by investigating the survivor’s past. A case of insurance fraud on Chicago’s south side which V I is also investigating leads her to an international conspiracy reaching back to Nazi Europe and gives her the unexpected means to help save her friend.
Reviews and Quotes
Already having established herself as an inventor of the female private
eye and a master of the mystery format, Paretsky skillfully expands the
form to tackle several convergent themes in a moving novel of discovery
and redemption. V I “Vic” Warshawski has a traditional mystery
to solve: the life insurance policy of black factory worker Aaron Sommers
had been faithfully maintained, paid for weekly even when other demands
surely seemed of greater urgency. But when Aaron’s widow needed to collect,
the company denied the claim, saying the policy had been cashed a decade
earlier. That leads Vic to Ajax Life Insurance Co. and Ralph Devereux,
whom she encountered in her very first case, Indemnity
Only (1982). Her
investigation is subtly intertwined with another much more personal and
wrenching inquiry into the appearance of a man calling himself Paul Radbuka,
whose recovered memory as a child survivor of the Holocaust leads him
to claim a kinship with Vic’s friend Max Loewenthal. Radbuka’s claim has
an unexpected and drastic affect on Lotty Herschel, Vic’s friend and mentor.
The twin investigations allow the author to explore simultaneously the
issues raised by the Illinois Holocaust Asset Recovery Act and the issue
of reparations for the descendants of slaves. Dark, absorbing, probing
Paretsky’s novel explores the complex web of degrees of guilt and complicity
surrounding the fate of Holocaust victims and survivors, with Lotty’s
story emerging with compelling, terrible clarity and inevitability.
—
Publishers Weekly
You can’t accuse Sara Paretsky of resting on her laurels. Total
Recall is written with the stylistic verve and intellectual energy of
a writer just coming into her own. V I has no idea of the anguish she
will cause Lotty Herschel, the elderly physician who has long been her
cherished advisor and friend when she tries to validate the shaky identity
claims of a Holocaust survivor nor could she have predicted how her efforts
to solve a piddling case of insurance fraud would ignite a political bonfire.
But having put a match to these volatile issues, V I is too principled
to back off. She has created a memorable character in Lotty, whose moving
tale of survivor guilt shames every other voice into silence.
—
The New York Times
With her gift for developing plots in a tight, coherent fashion, Paretsky
delivers two interesting mysteries [about the Holocaust and insurance
fraud], then links them with a compelling look at the issue of political
reparations. She develops this theme by juxtaposing two highly emotional
subjects: granting monetary awards to African-Americans to make ammends
for slavery and forcing insurance companies and banks to prove that they
are not holding Holocaust victims assets. All in all this is a wrenching
tale.
— USA Today