The former director of the Museum of Modern Art in Stockholm makes his literary debut with this dramatic and riveting novel of book publishing, Γ©migrΓ©s, spies, and diplomats in World War II Sweden based on his grandfatherβs life
In 1933, after Hitler and the Nazi Party consolidated power in Germany, Immanuel Birnbaum, a German-Jewish journalist based in Warsaw, is forbidden from writing for newspapers in his homeland. Six years later, just months before the German invasion of Poland that ignites World War II, Immanuel escapes to Sweden with his wife and two young sons.
Living as a refugee in Stockholm, Immanuel continues to write, contributing articles to a liberal Swiss newspaper under the name Dr. B. He becomes increasingly entangled with British intelligence agents who plan several acts of sabotage on the orders of Winston Churchill. But when the Swedish postal service picks up a letter written in invisible ink, clearly by Dr. B. himself, the Allied plotters are exposed. But could a Jew living in exile and targeted for death by the Nazis have wanted to tip them off?
Illuminated by the wartime experiences of the authorβs grandfather, Dr. B. is a riveting story of Γ©migrΓ©s, spies and diplomats that shines a light on a forgotten corner of World War II history.
βA superb thriller, a cross between Tom Stoppardβs Travesties and The Thirty-Nine Steps ... You canβt put it down. This is an astonishing debut and Daniel Birnbaum is clearly a talent to look out forβ The Jewish Chronicle
βIf youβre looking for a ridiculously brilliant story, you can stop looking ... Heβs got the worldβs best story β heβs got Dr Bβ Svenska Dagbladet
βAn astonishing thriller-novel ... reminiscent of both Hjalmar SΓΆderbergβs Doctor Glass as well as the dreamy melancholy in The Rings of Saturn by W.G Sebaldβ Aftonbladet
βA moving evocation of a life beset by conflicts in a troubled timeβ Kirkus Reviews
Daniel Birnbaum, b. 1963, is heralded as one of the worldβs most prominent art curators and currently director of Acute Art in London. He has previously managed both museums and art schools in Germany and Italy and he curated the Venice Biennale. Daniel is a contributing editor to Artforum in New York and contributes regularly to numerous British and American art magazines including Frieze. ArtReview (London) has regularly listed him among the hundred most influential people in the art world, and the year he curated the Venice Biennale he was listed as number 4 in the world. DR. B. is his first work of fiction, and it tells the story of his grandfather Immanuel Birnbaum.