Douglas Jackson, Blood Sacrifice (Canelo Action 2024)
Intrigue and excitement, fascinating character interactions, against a historical backrop
January 1943. As 50,000 Jews in the Warsaw ghetto prepare to ‘create a story that will never be forgotten’, double agent Jan Kalisz is prepared to supply them with weapons. Smuggling them into the ghetto will be difficult. The Jews are starving, but they have treasure to trade—gold, gemstones, Picassos.
Isaac Goldberg is ready to fight to the death. He tells Kalisz, ‘the Nazis will have us for breakfast; they’ll have you Poles for dinner’.
New Gestapo member, Axel Weiss, is found hanging, and the man had secrets—and multiple aliases. Was he investigating corruption in the expropriation the Jews or looking for a piece of the action? The SS are a danger; the ghetto is a danger, traitors are not tolerated. The King of the Ghetto, The Piano Man—the saviour of the Jews or another Nazi bloodsucker?
There is another threat, a cannibal targeting starving orphans, called The Golem.
The Warsaw Ghetto, just before the final blaze of martyrdom, is a powerful setting. The stories of persecution, as the Nazis exterminate the Jews one street at a time, painful to read, give the story unstoppable tension. The people who orchestrate this terror use euphemisms—‘taken the train’, ‘resettled in the east’—to dehumanise what they are doing, which only serves to accentuate it for the reader.
The timebomb in this story is horrific, and we feel it ticking on every page. Just when you think the stakes couldn’t be higher, it gets even more exciting.
Jackson is masterful at giving away information a bit at a time, keeping us hooked. We’re kept guessing the whole way through—Who are the good guys? Who are the collaborators? Who is hiding what secret? The complex social identities—Germans/Poles, Jews/Aryans, Nazis/Resistance, Zionists/Communists—make for fascinating character interactions.
Book 2 in the Warsaw Quartet.
This review first appeared in Historical Novels Review.









