"Is Love Blind?"
Readers looking to find how it felt to be living in Berlin
at the time of the Airlift of 1948-9 will not be
disappointed with Dan Spencer's, All Eyes Skyward. For
those of you who may not be aware, post Second World War
Germany had been divided into three sectors comprising the
Allied section controlled by the USA, England and France
and the remaining part by the Soviet Union. Berlin,
although it was situated in the eastern Soviet section,
was also divided into four parts, wherein the Allied
interests controlled West Berlin and the Soviets East
Berlin. In June 1948 there was an attempt by the Soviet Union to
control all of Berlin. A blockade had been imposed on all
surface traffic to and from the city. The result was a
near catastrophic starvation of the population. This
ultimately led to one of the greatest airlift operations
in aviation history wherein food supplies and coal were
dropped into Berlin by United States and its allies. The
airlift lasted until September of 1949 when Stalin caved
in, after realizing that his cruel plan was totally
ineffective. It is against this backdrop that Spencer
narrates the story of an American flyer Lt. Tucker Briggs,
who falls in love with a German woman, Greta Ludke.
Apparently, Greta's husband was a SS Officer and is now
missing in action or dead. This novel will probably whip up a mixture of feelings and
emotional charge from its readers-always a sign of good
drama. Tucker is portrayed as a very trustworthy,
compassionate and naïve person believing in Greta's
sincerity, even as to her explanations pertaining to her
lack of knowledge concerning the death camps. Readers,
however, will question Tucker's feelings. Were they
influenced by his first encounter with Greta when she had
saved him from a tight situation that could have ended in
his incarceration or even death at the hands of the
Soviets? To use the cliché, was his love blind? On the
other hand, Tucker's co-pilots, particularly Roy Couglin,
who lost one brother during the war and another came home
without legs, is painted as someone with bitter and
callous feelings towards the Germans. He fails to
understand how Tucker could believe Greta and why he would
even consider marrying her. After all, her husband was a
SS officer from a rich German family who had contributed
considerable sums of money to the German war effort. It
is his contention that she cannot be trusted and her only
objective was to get a plane ticket for her daughter and
herself into the USA. He questions her sincerity when he
mentions to Tucker that she still wears her wedding ring,
while other widows have sold theirs on the black
market. Spencer effectively uses curiosity and delay to create
compelling suspense. The novel is very well researched and
is not a haphazard collection of pieces randomly put
together, but rather a sequence of carefully organized
chapters each fulfilling the last and supporting the next.
The interactions among all of the characters together with
natural-sounding dialogue are realistically portrayed. All
Eyes Skyward is a moving and memorable novel, and no doubt
we have in Dan Spencer a powerful new voice in fiction. To read Norm's interview with Dan Spencer click: HERE
Reviewed by Norman Goldman
Courtesy Bookpleasures
Posted August 11, 2004
SummaryA tale of love, danger, and deception set during the heroic
Berlin Airlift of 1948-49.
Three years after the end of WWII, Greta Ludke, a young
German mother with a meek daughter, struggles for survival
by selling wares via Berlin's perilous black market.
When the Soviets blockade the divided city as part of a
ruthless political ploy, Berlin's citizens become pawns in
an international chess match. But American and British
flyers come to their aid with an airlift unlike anything
ever conceived, bringing hope to the besieged city.
Greta finds an unlikely savior in Lt. Tucker Briggs, a
guileless U.S. Air Force pilot assigned to the airlift. The
young lieutenant's passion for her spurs him through the
long, tedious mission. But as fate would have it, Tucker
must fly nearly every waking hour for months, so his visits
with Greta are brief, though filled with hope and promise.
Although dangers loom - kidnapping, starvation, violence,
and the chance of another horrifying war - Greta escapes
into pleasant dreams of a new life with her American
admirer. But her questionable past, Tucker's naivete, and
Berlin's nerve-wracking political tensions conspire against
Greta's longing for love and salvation.
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