![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjWJTnlUIB4z1osh-BmlKKOXUWavE8qkKVeYtNuFAzxL-d3wAuV_W1_M9zvmFtYo6SA6ZJEfRxWvFWlNXaNyY1nZV3hlJkvSy52NuBMzjaBBc8uj7igt0eeX6qY0jK_mALAxgYwBsht5PldxKyumH_PVa_Q8nHGZOBQUhlirZfqE-fSj71PWdSGFFtGLA/s200/goodman.jpg)
At the Guardian Goodman tagged ten novels that "explore how the guilt and traumas of war are passed down to succeeding generations," including:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg_hfDO1eLd6G0ddD6oe57B0UF4J__6Pt44_owUFIiRbGswpUnGi1hTipWCilMt094USXOyKWvW_rIR82dzWo7tDKnGsuHn4ZTJTwtHlNFXA_B-JtQO5KGRfH84Za3n5X32i44Dc8e5o4pwgLYiD1ha5rmRjUBUTdauipQySY1jozcOmAPMWg/w209-h320/kerr.jpg)
The One from the Other by Philip Kerr (2006)Read about another entry on the list.
In 1949, Bernie Gunther re-establishes himself as a private detective in Munich. In true noir mode, a femme fatale sets him on a manhunt – but Bernie’s got some SS history of his own and soon finds that he’s the hunted one. Who’s an ally in this Germany, who’s an enemy - and how do you tell the one from the other?
--Marshal Zeringue