Reviewed by: Keith Nixon
Genre: Thriller/Short Story
Approximate word count: 10-11,000 words
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Author:
Nikos
Kalpakis is a filmmaker and short story author who lives in Greece.
Description:
Themis is a
painter struggling with his craft. One of his neighbours, a shopkeeper, is
murdered. He spots two neo-Nazis nearby, assumes they are the perpetrators, and
decides to take revenge on Ali’s behalf.
Appraisal:
I’m not
sure where to start with this review. Killing
Nazis is a literal title, the protagonist Themis is driven into this and in
parallel paints. His justification seems to result from a story about his
grandmother who took revenge on some Nazis who killed her husband during the
WWII occupation of Thessaloniki where the plot is based. Themis gains
additional motivation after a local shopkeeper, Ali, is murdered and scalped.
Somewhat unhinged Themis blames the Nazis and then goes about hunting them
down, almost like a nest of ants he decides to exterminate.
But there
are problems. I got no feeling of the location, it could be based anywhere. The
author didn’t explain why there were Nazis on the island and why they were at
fault (okay the protagonist is clearly mad, but the links were too weak). The
vast majority of the story was an internal monologue with virtually no
dialogue, mostly from the protagonist’s point of view but sometimes, mid-scene,
the perspective would jump from protagonist to Nazi.
The Nazis
weren’t believable. One moment they were tough, the next weak and gay
(literally) – I expect this is because Themis was seeing things from an
unbalanced perspective, but even so... There was very little description of the
other characters – in general I have no problem with this (Fleming never fully
described James Bond, for example) but in the final scenes there’s a whole
group of Nazis. They’re described as old, young, wearing a work shirt etc. Very
confusing and led to a multiple use of the word Nazi (as I have).
Fairly
early on Themis learns the Nazis are not responsible for Ali’s murder, but
still he continues. I guess we have to assume he’s mad and this justifies the
ongoing brutality. But it didn’t work for me.
On a
technical basis there was a regular use of the same word in a paragraph, grammar
errors, punctuation errors, spelling mistakes, incorrect use of words, tense
changes, and mangled sentences. However I expect the author was writing in
their second language which isn’t easy.
A couple of
examples:
The Nazi pushed himself off the
ground, cursing Jesus, Mary and all the holly saints of the Orthodox Church. He
stood in his one leg and tried to put some weight on his right leg, a sheer
amount of pain rushed through his body.
You ran at high school, you run at
your spare time. You are the fasted among your brothers when we chase the
Blacks and the Browns, this is nothing.
Overall I
just didn’t get the point of the story, it clearly wasn’t sufficiently well
developed. On the other hand it wasn’t the worst book I’ve ever read.
FYI:
Some adult
language.
Format/Typo Issues:
None.
Rating: ** Two Stars
2 comments:
Thanks for finally writing about > "Killing Nazis / Nikos Kalpakis" < Liked it!
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What a great interview and interesting premise.
I like that it sounds unique and different.
And perhaps like it has an element of mystery.
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