Spanning the tumultuous years 1934 to 1948, John Lawton's A Lily of the
Field is a brilliant historical thriller from a master of the form. The
book follows two characters--Méret Voytek, a talented young cellist
living in Vienna at the novel's start, and Dr. Karel Szabo, a Hungarian
physicist interned in a camp on the Isle of Man. In his seventh
Inspector Troy novel, Lawton moves seamlessly from Vienna and Auschwitz
to the deserts of New Mexico and the rubble-strewn streets of postwar
London, following the fascinating parallels of the physicist Szabo and
musician Voytek as fate takes each far from home and across the
untraditional battlefields of a destructive war to an unexpected
intersection at the novel's close. The result, A Lily of the Field, is
Lawton's best book yet, an historically accurate and remarkably written
novel that explores the diaspora or two Europeans from the rise of
Hitler to the post-atomic age.