
Paul Levine: Midnight Burning
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In this episode, I chat with Paul Levine about his new novel, Midnight Burning.
A physicist, a comic genius, and a city on the brink—Paul Levine joins us to unpack Midnight Burning, a high-velocity historical thriller that brings Albert Einstein and Charlie Chaplin into the crosshairs of a real fascist movement in 1937 Los Angeles. We open with a personal note, then dive into the craft and conscience behind turning buried history into a page-turner that feels startlingly current.
Levine traces his path from Miami Herald reporter to trial lawyer to television writer, revealing how courtroom rigor and the writers’ room taught him to build lean scenes and dialogue that pop. That muscle powers a story grounded in documented realities: the German-American Bund, the Silver Legion, Nazi bookstores in L.A., a Hollywood hit list, and a citizens’ spy ring that gathered evidence without firing a shot. We talk about Georgia Ann Robinson, LAPD’s first Black female officer, and the moral compromises of studios navigating German censors like Dr. George Gyssling. Along the way, Levine explains how he balances verifiable quotes and biographies with credible invention, keeping Einstein’s dry humor and Chaplin’s political courage intact while pushing them into danger that tests their wits and resolve.
If you love smart historical thrillers, legal-sharp dialogue, or the hidden history of Los Angeles and Hollywood, you’ll find much to savor in Midnight Burning. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves page-turners with purpose, and leave a review to help others discover the show. What moment surprised you most?
Paul Levine
Midnight Burning, Paul Levine
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