Sunday, June 14, 2026

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Midnight Patriots: An Einstein-Chaplin Thriller by Paul Levine

  

Paul Levine is a former trial lawyer and the author of two best-selling legal thriller series that have won the John D. MacDonald Fiction Award and have been shortlisted for the Edgar, Macavity, International Thriller, Shamus, and James Thurber prizes. He took an entirely different direction with his writing in 2025 with a book set in the late 1930s about real-life friends Charlie Chaplin and Albert Einstein who united their considerable forces to oppose the creeping fascism threatening to overtake the world. Combining fact with well-considered fiction, it was named Best Thriller of the Year from Best Thrillers.com.

The dynamic if unlikely duo of Chaplin and Einstein is back in Midnight Patriots (Nittany Valley Productions, June 2026). This time Charlie is in deep trouble. William Randolph Hearst has put out a contract on Charlie because of his ongoing dalliance with Hearst’s mistress Marion Davies. (The much older Hearst was notoriously jealous of Chaplin and possessive of Davies. A Peter Bogdanovich film called The Cat’s Meow (2001) uses it to explain the death of cinema producer Thomas H. Ince. Wonderful movie.) In addition, a German sharpshooter has been sent to assassinate Chaplin for his satirical portrayal of Hitler in his new movie The Great Dictator. Chaplin made Hitler look a fool and Hitler wasn’t standing for it.

Einstein isn’t much better off. An aging German spy named Fritz Duquesne is determined to show his bosses that he has not lost his touch. He plans to kidnap Einstein and return him to the Nazi Germany Einstein fled years earlier. At the same time, and fortunately for both Chaplin and Einstein, a pair of FBI agents is watching Einstein at J. Edgar Hoover’s orders to obtain evidence of subversive behavior. Major Leslie Groves is trying to enlist Einstein to monitor the research into an atomic device underway at multiple universities.

While under multiple threats, Chaplin tries to convert prospective presidential candidate Charles Lindbergh from his isolationist views. Mobster Mickey Cohen acts as bodyguard to Chaplin and Einstein. And Lena Horne gets her big career break when she meets Cohen who offers her a performing contract at a popular nightclub of which he is part owner.

Most of the major players were real people. A summary at the end of the book explains which is which and what happened to the nonfictional ones. Somehow the idea that Einstein and Chaplin could be friends is startling but they were both well-known world citizens and they held similar views. Likewise, Lindbergh’s status as an aviation hero clouds public knowledge of his conservative politics and strong belief in eugenics. It is easy to draw parallels between people and events in the book, set in the late 1930s, and the present time.

Much of the action takes place on the cross-country train known as the Super Chief, as Einstein and Chaplin return to Los Angeles after a trip to New York and a stop in Chicago on their way west. Insight into the workings of the long-gone passenger railway is always fascinating. Readers who like mysteries set on trains will want to read this book, as will those interested in the mindset of the United States as it waffled on entering the war against Germany.

The parts here about how the pro-war factions in the U.S. worked around the insular Congress reminds me of one of my favorite books of 2024. The Wealth of Shadows by Graham Moore (Random House, 2024), which was a fictionalized account of real-life happenings during the early days of World War II, described how President Roosevelt tasked the Treasury Department with finding a way to undermine the German economy, intending to force a financial stop to the fighting while staying officially within the isolationist policies in place.

A fascinating piece of fictionalized history. Recommended!

 

·                     ISBN-13: ‎979-8994263013

·                     Publisher: ‎Nittany Valley Productions, Inc.

·                     Publication date: ‎June 16, 2026

·                     Language: ‎English

·                     Print length: ‎390 pages

 

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link:  https://amzn.to/4xr9ici

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2026

Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.

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