Review by New York Times Review
THE DREYFUS AFFAIR, which splintered French society of the fin de siècle and continued to divide it well into the 20th century, began on the morning of Oct. 15, 1894, with the arrest for high treason of Capt. Alfred Dreyfus. Dreyfus was a 35-year-old artillery officer, a high-ranking graduate of the elite École Polytechnique and the École de Guerre (the French Army's war college), and was chosen on the basis of his grades and overall performance to train with the army's general staff. Robert Harris, in his fine novel "An Officer and a Spy," lucidly retells the famous, bizarrely complicated and chilling story. His narrator is Lt. Col. Georges Picquart, who was promoted to that grade six months after Dreyfus's arrest and put in charge of the general staff's statistical section (the coy sobriquet of a counterintelligence unit), and went on to become one of Dreyfus's improbable and indispensable saviors. Dreyfus's presence on the general staff was a double anomaly, annoying to his colleagues and superiors. Merit-based appointments had been introduced only a few years earlier, replacing the comfortable system by which general staff officers co-opted candidates who resembled them: sons of noble or solid bourgeois families educated at Catholic schools and St. Cyr, the military academy founded by Napoleon. Far more remarkable and significant, Dreyfus was a Jew - the first ever admitted into the precincts of the Holy Ark, as the very anti-Semitic general staff was called with unconscious irony. So when evidence surfaced suggesting a traitor at the general staff was passing secrets to the Germans, suspicion quickly fell on Dreyfus. Relying on a dubious handwriting analysis and disregarding the absence of a motive or any other proof, the war minister General Mercier had Dreyfus arrested. Dreyfus's court-martial trial, held in closed session, began on Dec. 19. Mercier had been warned early on that the case was weak. Now his personal observer at the trial - that same Georges Picquart - told him acquittal seemed likely. Afraid of the scandal that would erupt over his frivolously charging an officer with treason and risking a confrontation with Germany, Mercier and his cohort swung into action. A major from the statistical section took the stand and perjured himself, incriminating Dreyfus. Mercier dispatched an officer to hand the tribunal a secret file, containing documents that had been altered or forged so as to point to Dreyfus's guilt. These were accompanied by a memorandum (prepared by a staff officer) that gave them the appropriate nefarious slant. The secret file, the perjured testimony and the forged documents all amounted to felonies under French law. But they had the desired effect. After only an hour of deliberation, during which the file was read aloud, the judges found Dreyfus guilty and sentenced him to military degradation and imprisonment for life. On Jan. 5, 1895, before a mob of thousands screaming "Death to the Judas, death to the Jew," insignia of rank, epaulets, buttons and braid were ripped off Dreyfus's uniform, his sword was broken and he was forced to perform the "Judas parade," a march around an immense courtyard lined with soldiers. He was deported to Devil's Island, a nearly barren rock formation measuring less than one square mile off the coast of French Guiana, and held in solitary confinement until June 1899 - when he was returned to France after the nation's highest court ordered a new trial. News of the irregularities at the court-martial had gotten out and, eventually, Dreyfus had many defenders who had worked unremittingly for that result. (They included the celebrities Émile Zola, Anatole France and Georges Clemenceau, as well as the young Marcel Proust.) But it is possible that the real traitor, Maj. Ferdinand Walsin-Esterhazy, a dissolute and incorrigible liar and schemer who belonged to an illegitimate branch of the great Central European aristocratic family, would have never been discovered without the unflinching courage and rectitude of Georges Picquart. Picquart was the soul of honor and an officer of exceptional cultivation, bravery and promise. He was clearly destined to rise to the top of the army hierarchy, and he did - partly because of his role in the Dreyfus Affair - becoming a general after Dreyfus's rehabilitation and eventually serving as minister of war. Drawing on the vast trove of books about the affair and some newly available materials, Harris tells a gripping tale. Once Picquart had discovered evidence linking Esterhazy to the German military attaché, he determined to his own satisfaction that the handwriting in evidence belonged to him, not Dreyfus, and that the documents handed to the military tribunal were clumsy forgeries and drivel. He resolved not to go to the grave carrying the secret: The man on Devil's Island had to be freed, and the real traitor punished. But when he made his views known, the fury of the army's top brass turned full blast on him. Cast as a renegade whistle-blower, an ingrate who would not let a Jew rot to save the honor of generals, he was imprisoned and cashiered from the army before he was finally redeemed. FOR ALL HIS suffering and rectitude, it so happens that Picquart, like Dreyfus, was a prig as well as a hero, but Harris makes him sufficiently charming and vulnerable to engage the reader's sympathy. Yet if the novel has a fault, it is precisely the decision to view the affair through Picquart's eyes. The focus is necessarily too narrow, failing to take in the historical background, without which some of what happened may seem more puzzling than it was. For instance, the savage determination of the generals not to admit a mistake, and the public's support of that position, has to be seen in the context of the army's status at the time as the one respected (indeed venerated) French institution. The French had been crushed in the 1870 war with Prussia and lost most of two huge regions, Alsace and Lorraine. But the army had reconstituted itself, and was seen as the instrument of inevitable revenge. To impugn the honor of its chiefs was unforgivable. Similarly, the callousness that allowed the generals and junior officers who knew the truth (or should have) to leave an innocent man in jail cannot be dissociated from the extraordinary wave of virulent anti-Semitism that had washed over France since the 1880s. Yes, there was a traitor peddling secrets (unimportant ones, as it turned out), yes it was the duty of the statistical section to ferret him out, and certainly the frenzy of the cover-up and the all-too-familiar impulse to punish the whistle-blower instead of the culprit played its role in the viciousness with which Picquart was persecuted and framed - but it is hard to believe that an officer as manifestly blameless as Dreyfus would have been charged with treason and railroaded to life imprisonment if the stereotype of the Jew as the man without a country, riddled with vices and by his nature a traitor, had not permeated the French psyche. LOUIS BEGLEY is the author of "Why the Dreyfus Affair Matters" and a number of other books. His latest novel, "Memories of a Marriage," was published in 2013.
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [February 9, 2014]
Review by Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Harris' instantly absorbing thriller reanimates the Dreyfus Affair of 1895 through Colonel Georges Picquart, who exposed the conspiracy to frame Dreyfus for supplying the Germans with French Army secrets. After serving as the minister of war's observer at Dreyfus' military trial, Picquart is promoted to lead the army's espionage unit. Picquart immerses himself in the dark work and quickly discovers evidence of another soldier leaking information to the German attache. When he's denied permission to launch a sting operation, Picquart joins forces with a Surete (police) detective to gather evidence through an unofficial surveillance scheme. Convinced that the secret evidence that convicted Dreyfus implicates his current target instead, Picquart investigates further and finds a conspiracy originating in the army's top ranks. In the anti-Semitic climate of this pivotal period in French society, Picquart's insistence that Dreyfus the Jew may be innocent creates dangerous, powerful enemies. Harris combats the predictability that can haunt fictional accounts of well-known events by teasing out the tale through Picquart's training in espionage and investigation, his unsanctioned detecting, and the complex intrigues he navigates to secure a reexamination of Dreyfus' case. Great for fans of Ken Follett, John le Carre, Louis Bayard, Caleb Carr, and Martin Cruz Smith, all of whom also portray historical intrigues and investigations with intricate detail and literary skill. Also try Jason Matthews' recently published Red Sparrow (2013).--Tran, Christine Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Harris (Fatherland) provides easily the best fictional treatment of the Dreyfus Affair yet, in this gripping thriller told from the vantage point of French army officer Georges Picquart. Major Picquart is present on the day in 1895 that Alfred Dreyfus is publicly degraded as a traitor to his country, before his exile to Devil's Island. Soon afterward, Picquart is promoted to colonel, to assume command of the Statistical Section, which is actually the army's espionage unit. Picquart comes across evidence of another traitor spying for the Germans, and his investigation uncovers something unsettling: the handwriting of the spy, Walsin Esterhazy, is a perfect match for the writing on the letters that the French government claimed were from Dreyfus. Furthermore, review of the classified evidence against the exile reveals nothing of substance. Picquart pursues the truth, at personal and professional risk, in the face of superiors eager to preserve the official version of events. Harris perfectly captures the rampant anti-Semitism that led to Dreyfus's scapegoating, and effectively uses the present tense to lend intimacy to the narrative. First printing of 100,000. Agent: Michael Carlisle, Inkwell Management. (Jan.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Harris's (Lustrum) latest work is a fictional telling of the Dreyfus Affair, which occurred during the turn of the 20th century in France. Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish captain in the French army, is set up and unjustly convicted of being a spy, receiving a life sentence in the dreaded Devil's Island prison. Georges Picquart is a military man who held many positions in the army, including that of a high-ranking intelligence officer. Picquart discovers evidence of Dreyfus's innocence but must fight stubborn superiors and public opinion to exonerate him. Listeners may benefit from a print copy of the book as the French names can be hard to follow. David Rintoul's narration transports readers to a time over 100 years ago. -VERDICT This masterly intertwining of fact with fiction is a must for thriller fans. ["This is an atmospheric and tense historical thriller, with a flawed but honorable protagonist fighting against entrenched complacence and bigotry," read the review of the Knopf hc, LJ 1/14.]-Sean Kennedy, Cleveland Marshall Coll. Law Lib. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Labyrinthine machinations having to do with the Dreyfus Affair, the late 19th-century spy case that disclosed a latent anti-Semitism in French culture. The main character and narrator of Harris' novel is Col. Georges Picquart, former professor of topography at the cole suprieure de guerre in Paris. While on the surface, topography might seem a peripheral issue to the military, according to Picquart, it involves "the fundamental science of war," since it requires surveying terrain and generally looking at landscape from a military perspective. Chosen to head a counterespionage agency looking into the crimes allegedly committed by Dreyfus, Picquart has already been rewarded with a nice promotion and seems convinced of Dreyfus' guilt. But in investigating the case, Picquart begins to have doubts about this guilt and is fairly sure espionage is continuing through Maj. Esterhazy, a Germany spy who's been passing along the secrets Dreyfus has been accused of disclosing. Military officials are not pleased that Picquart is coming up with evidence that might exonerate Dreyfus since, by this time, Dreyfus has already been convicted and condemned to spend time on Devil's Island, recently reopened solely for him. Gen. Gonse, for example, cautions Picquart not to be overly enthusiastic in his inquiries concerning Dreyfus since, after all, he's already been convicted and so his guilt is proved. Public opinion, alas, is on the side of Gonse, for much of the population, inflamed by the popular press, already sees Dreyfus as a traitor and delights in conveying their virulent anti-Semitism. Espionage, counterespionage, a scandalous trial, a coverup and a man who tries to do right make this a complex and alluring thriller.]]]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.