About:
The Locksmith by Lafe Metz is the memoir of Kurt Kann, a German born American solider during World War II. The story is told through the eyes of Mr. Kann.
The author is giving away one eCopy of this book—enter at the end of the post.
- 191 pages
- Publisher:LoudCloud Publishing
- ASIN:B005208X9I
My rating for The Locksmith – 4
Buy The Locksmith on Amazon.com*
More Books by Lafe Metz*
Thoughts:
The Locksmith by Lafe Metz is the engrossing story of Kurt Kann, the kind of stories you only see in the movies and tell yourself “if it could only be true”. The story is moving, funny and tells of lost innocent and growing up in an ugly world.
There are many highlights in this book, the firsthand account of the Allied invasion at Omaha Beach, the liberation of concentration camps and the grown up Sergeant Kann’s reunion with his family and confrontation with the man who brought much misery the his loved ones.
Mr. Kann is a human being, which comes across very clearly in the narrative. He has dreams, nightmares and fears. He is not Captain America punching Hitler, but a man who truly believes he is fighting evil incarnate. Along the way Mr. Kann tells about his family and even about the motherly Jewish guilt trip he gets after telling his parents he joined the US Army after Pearl Harbor:
“Go to your silly war. What should I care, I’m only your mother. My heart breaks, he doesn’t care. A mother’s love, thrown away, like an apple with a worm. Who knew I would be killed by my own flesh and blood in such a way as this! Dead of a broken heart. My first born child, he comes to the funeral only to spit on my grave”.
The contrast between Nazi Germany and America is also very poignant in the book. Kurt’s family had to bribe their way out of German (you’d think they’d be happy to let them go) and when they got to America, even though penniless, they appreciated what they had.
Mr. Kann does not ask for forgiveness or understanding (personally I don’t think he has done anything wrong) but simply tells his story, sharing it with the world. I personally found Mr. Kann’s story awe inspiring, reflective and almost unbelievable.
The book is peppered with GI slang and phrases in French and German which I liked, the writing is engrossing and very good for a first time author. While I felt that the book lacked some insight, I certainly was not disappointed in this fantastic story.
The author admits in the book that this memoir is based on a true story. While Mr. Kann’s memory is sharp there were some discrepancies in the interviews with Mr. Kann or some dialogue is fictionalize, the point still stands. Reading the memoir was like sitting with Mr. Kann over a beer while he tells his tales.
Books in a similar vein:
Citizen Soldiers by Stephen Ambrose
Gated Grief by Leila Levinson
Siberian Prison by E.V. Enzmann
So tell me, do you consider memoirs based on a true story as fiction or non-fiction?
Synopsis:
Kurt Kann rides a motorcycle across German to protect his Jewish family during Kristallnacht. However, Kurt arrives too late finding his father gone, his mother brutalized and his brother traumatized.
Kurt doesn’t forgive or forget and as a sergeant in the 203rd Engineer Combat Battalion he leads his squad onto Omaha Beach. Leading his men across the continent Kurt’s ultimate goal is to find the man who betrayed his family that one fateful night.
Buy The Locksmith on Amazon.com*
More Books by Lafe Metz*
Giveaway
Giveaway ends: January 10, 2012
This is an international contest
Winners will have 24 hours to write back with their address, otherwise an alternate winner will be picked
Congratulations: relkatz@
Zohar – Man of la Book
Disclaimer: I got this book for free.
*Amazon links point to an affiliate account, the money is usually spent on books
Article first published as Book Review: The Locksmith by Kurt Kann, as told to Lafe Metz on Blogcritics.
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BOOK BLOGGERS – Have you read The Locksmith? If so link up your review below:





10 Comments
I hope I’m leaving this info in the right place…
my email: mary.unebellevie@gmail.com
my blog: http://bibliophyte.blogspot.com
Thanks for having such a great giveaway!
Hi Mary,
please fill the Rafflecopter form. If you can’t see the form it might be because your work is blocking it.
Well, drat. It won’t let me fill out the form. Sorry about the confusion!
I especially like memoirs that read like you’re chatting with the author. I’ll keep this one in mind and link to your review on War Through the Generations.
Form was being weird so wanted to put email here:
supersonic182@gmail.com
I’m a huge WWII history junkie so this looks incredible to me.
Hi Kara,
I entered you in the form.
I think that memoirs “based” on a true story count as fiction – maybe even as historical fiction, BUT I always appreciate author notes explaining which parts are true and which are fictionalized.
Thanks for the great giveaway! This would be a great read!
megnate at telus dot net
Thank you so much for the book !
hi thanks…….
Really a nice book..