The Fox
by Adam S. Toporek
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Pub Date 28 Jan 2023 | Archive Date 7 Aug 2023
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Description
In a world crumbling under the weight of madness, where fear and propaganda have replaced decency and truth, how does anyone navigate a path ahead?
It's been seven tumultuous months since Hitler's rise to power, and Germany has succumbed to the chilling grip of Nazification. As a renowned radio personality and brash advocate for the regime, Friedrich Foxx has played his part in fueling the flames of German rebirth.
But when Friedrich encounters Ilse, a captivating fanatic half his age, he is confronted by the haunting repercussions of his words and is soon forced to make the most consequential decision of his life: continue to support the madness of the fascist dictatorship or risk everything to take a stand against it?
In an urgent clarion call that reverberates through our own troubled times, author Adam S. Toporek resurrects the specters of our media's dark past. With unflinching honesty, he exposes the compromises that feed the insidious spread of tyranny, while unveiling the harrowing outcomes that propaganda and disinformation can unleash.
Prepare to be captivated by this terse, gripping tale of a man’s soul-searching struggle in the face of tyranny—a tale that lays bare the power of words, the fragility of truth, and the indomitable human spirit.
Advance Praise
"An unflinching look at the insidious power of lies, misinformation, and propaganda... Adam S. Toporek tells a harrowing tale of a man trying to atone for the sins of his past, only to realize that some lies have far-reaching and uncontrollable consequences. Friedrich's story will break your heart and force you to contemplate humanity's future. Highly recommended." Pikasho Deka, Readers' Favorite
"...offers much food for thought." Astrid Lustulin
"A novella with several twists and turns and an unexpected ending that will make readers think of the Second World War a bit differently." Maria Victoria Beltran
"Toporek's characters exhibit desperation and a sense of urgency with heart-pounding scenes that kept me holding my breath." Kim Zoby
Available Editions
ISBN | 000B0BTC2RP73 |
PRICE | US$2.99 (USD) |
PAGES | 116 |
Links
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
An amazing short story about a man who helped create the Nazi terror, then woke up to what he created. This story is fantastic, but too short! It needed to be a lot longer with the parts between 1933 and 1945 in it. And I thought the ending, while admittedly realistic was sad. I have to admit, I like happy endings.
This little novella packs a punch -- its a vignette into the life of one man in Germany, both in 1933 and 1945. I liked how it wasn't overcomplicated in terms of characters or plot, but showed what real events could have been like for this type of person. Even though it is short, you get invested in Friedrich and his moral struggle as the Third Reich is on the rise, and even in the end of the war. Highly recommend for anyone interested in WWII literature!
The Fox by Adam S. Toporek is about Friedrich Foxx who as a Nazi party member helped them come to power in 1933 but slowly wakes up to the realisation of just what he has done and the monster he has helped to unleash on the world. This was a short read but I enjoyed it immensely.
I received a complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are my own.
The Fox had me captivated from beginning to end. Also, no one in this story was likable. Their personality changes throughout the war were realistically haunting. Johann and his brother will haunt my dreams tonight . Very, very well written and haunting.
The hero of this cautionary tale, Friedrich Foxx, is a journalist whose story we begin to follow in the 1930's.
A suave character, he loves Hitler, but does not as yet take seriously how deep his - and others' - anti-semitism really is. Then his secretary starts to refer to one of his friends as a hook-nose.
He begins to see the light a little more when his good friend Goebbels sends him an obnoxious bureaucrat who asks him to toe the line a little more with this anti-semitism. But surely his good buddy will recognise that a gentleman journalist needs full autonomy to express himself as he pleases?
Won't he?.........
Fast forward a few years. Foxx is now an old, broken man, having not just lost his illustrious job, but incarcerated too. He is poor, disenfranchised, trying to survive in a destroyed Berlin. But the Nazis left behind still want to wreak maximum destruction.
Foxx meets two boys, and seeks redemption in trying to protect and shelter them. However, this is not a story that believes in happy endings.
Possibly the sad ending is meant to drive home the cautionary message, though to me it brought an element of distaste. The degradation of humanity, the capacity for committing atrocities and breaking the human spirit - yes, there are surely real-life tales from WW2 that are surely far more heinous than this. We get the point.
It's a short story, barely a novella. And its message is no less true. Complacency and not recognising evil in time allow these things to happen so no, don't be like Foxx.
It is August 1933 and it has been seven months since Hitler was appointed as the Chancellor of Germany, and the country is almost completely Nazified. The most famous radio personality Friedrich Foxx is part of Germany's transformation as the voice of its rebrth, and soon he must choose whether he is going to support the madness that is Naziism and it;s facist dictatorship or whether he is going to fight against it.
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