Fiction from Fact: Escape in Time
April 28

Fiction from Fact: Escape in Time

Robyn Nyx blogs:

Just over a year ago, I returned from Ravensbrück in Germany from a research trip for this novel. I came up with the idea for the Extractor trilogy one lazy Sunday morning, and to build a series, I knew I was in for a tough journey…I didn’t realise how tough until I began to write.

In Escape in Time, my hero Landry Donovan and her team of Operatives jump back to Nazi Germany to save the life of a Jewish doctor, who, had she not been murdered in the concentration camp, would have gone on to find the cure for cancer. As I began to research the camp and to write the sections set in the 1940s, it became clear that I needed to visit the places I was writing about. This is a subject that necessitates extremely sensitive treatment, and I felt I could only do that, and do the victims justice, by immersing myself in the place they were imprisoned.

I trod the same soil as over 130,000 women and children, 90,000 of whom were murdered on it. I stood in the crematorium where many of them were burned to ash. I looked out across the impossibly beautiful lake to Fürstenberg from the first floor of a pitched roof villa that wouldn’t have looked out of place at Center Parcs, a villa typical of the accommodation afforded to the guards of Ravensbrück. I stood in the cells where women were tortured and beaten. I saw evidence of the medical experiments, where women were used as guinea pigs for the furtherance of Nazi research. I touched the five-inch-thick, A3 bound book where the name of every single Ravensbrück prisoner is written. I heard the tales of sadism from the mouths of survivors.

It wasn’t a pleasant experience. To think that, as a human race, and as women, we are capable of such inhumane behaviour, beggars belief. But we have evolved, getting steadily more violent, and our advancements in weaponry mean that our violence has the potential to affect millions of people at the press of a button. But this wasn’t that kind of faceless violence. This was barbaric and brutal, personal and targeted. The women at Ravensbrück weren’t just Jewish, they were women from over twenty European countries, mostly held for political reasons, and for being asocial (criminals, prostitutes, lesbians). We have our freedom of speech. We have the ability to announce our personal views to a worldwide audience at the touch of a smartphone screen. Unless our views are racist or homophobic, or preach religious hatred, we can pretty much say what the hell we like. That was a freedom not afforded in Nazi Germany, and I wonder how many of us would have become a number in a German KZ. On a daily basis, how many things have you said or done which, in that time, would have resulted in you being imprisoned indefinitely, and without trial? It’s frightening.

At the time I was in Germany, I wondered if something like this could happen again. Fast forward ten months, and a certain Donald Trump was elected…My faith in the human race is not what it once was. It suffered a devastating blow whilst on this research trip, one from which it may never recover, and the current reports of the frightening goings-on in America don’t help. After all, as Gunther Anders said: “Hardly anyone is immune to the temptations of unpunished inhumanity.” How many Americans are finding themselves tempted to turn on the different? To turn away the “tired…poor…huddled masses yearning to breathe free?” I write about the darker side of human nature to remind myself, and hopefully others, to cultivate the light. There are parts of this novel that are hard to read, but like it or not, they are part of our history. They should remind us, always, that compassion is one of our more powerful characteristics, and apathy is our most dangerous.

Now I’ve been all serious and dark, let’s lighten the mood with a celebratory giveaway—a copy of Escape in Time (shipped to anywhere in the world) to the person who leaves the most interesting/touching/emotive comment on my website or Facebook page. I’ll have someone else select the winner, and then I’ll be in touch for delivery details. 

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