Family of Spies by Christine Kuehn

Family of Spies, by Christine Kuehn, is a gripping account of a family secret that lay hidden for generations and reveals a shocking history. It tells the true story of Kuehn’s family, who worked as spies for the Nazis and reported to the Japanese before the attack on Pearl Harbor. None of this was known to the author until she received a letter from a screenwriter asking about the German spies in her family. Kuehn thought it was a joke or some kind of mistake. As a child, Christine Kuehn asked her father about his parents and siblings, but he was always elusive. The idea that her grandparents and Aunt were German spies seemed impossible.

Still, the letter gnawed at her. Christine and her husband went to their local bookstore and reviewed the indexes of every book about Pearl Harbor. To her astonishment, they discovered that her grandparents, Otto and Friedel Kuehn, were indeed spies for America’s enemies, as was her now elderly Aunt Ruth. Eventually, Kuehn’s father admitted the truth about his family. Not wanting to burden his daughter or face his own shame, he had kept his family’s treasonous past secret. He couldn’t, or wouldn’t, recall the gritty details of their involvement. Even though his parents tried to protect him from their activities, he carried the weight of their crimes for his entire life.

Determined to learn more, Kuehn began researching her relatives’ journey from Germany to their internment after Pearl Harbor and eventual return to Germany. Her investigation spanned decades, and each new revelation brought new shock. Her grandparents eagerly joined the Nazi party after WWI and never turned away from its cruelty. Christine’s uncle, Leopold, worked for Joseph Goebbels, a barbaric leader in Hitler’s regime. Her Aunt Ruth even dated him. It was Goebbels who sent the Kuehn family to Hawaii in 1936 and paid them well for the secrets they passed to Germany and Japan. The information her grandparents and Aunt shared helped the Japanese in their attack on Pearl Harbor. Another  stunning piece of knowledge Kuehn was forced to absorb.

I wish she had spent more time probing deeper into the Kuehn family’s motivations. Was their betrayal driven solely by ideology? Where did they develop these thoughts? Was it greed alone? Or had they become so deeply tangled in their tasks that they could no longer change course?

Although the story ended tragically for her family, Christine Kuehn courageously confronted the past and was brave enough to share it. She skillfully blends meticulous research with a compelling, fast-paced narrative. The book reads like a spy thriller, weaving together past and present, Her work reminds us of the power of uncovering hidden truths and that personal stories are integral to understanding our history. 4/5

Previous
Previous

The Things We Never Say by Elizabeth Strout

Next
Next

Wild Dark Shore by Charlotte McConaghy