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Library | Call Number | Status |
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Searching... Monmouth Public Library | Fic Smith, T. 2012 | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
Tom Rob Smith's debut, Child 44 , was an immediate sensation and marked the arrival of a major new talent in contemporary fiction. Named one of top 100 thrillers of all time by NPR, it hit bestseller lists around the world, won the CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger Award and the ITW Thriller Award for Best First Novel, and was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize.
In this spellbinding new novel, Tom Rob Smith probes the tenuous border between love and obsession as Leo Demidov struggles to untangle the threads of a devastating conspiracy that shatters everything he holds dear. Deftly capturing the claustrophobic intensity of the Cold War-era Soviet Union, it's at once a heart-pounding thriller and a richly atmospheric novel of extraordinary depth....
AGENT 6
Leo Demidov is no longer a member of Moscow's secret police. But when his wife, Raisa, and daughters Zoya and Elena are invited on a "Peace Tour" to New York City, he is immediately suspicious.
Forbidden to travel with his family and trapped on the other side of the world, Leo watches helplessly as events in New York unfold and those closest to his heart are pulled into a web of political conspiracy and betrayal-one that will end in tragedy.
In the horrible aftermath, Leo demands only one thing: to investigate the killer who destroyed his family. His request is summarily denied. Crippled by grief and haunted by the need to find out exactly what happened on that night in New York, Leo takes matters into his own hands. It is a quest that will span decades, and take Leo around the world--from Moscow, to the mountains of Soviet-controlled Afghanistan, to the backstreets of New York--in pursuit of the one man who knows the truth: Agent 6.
Author Notes
International #1 bestselling author Tom Rob Smith graduated from Cambridge University in 2001 and lives in London. His novels in the Child 44 trilogy were New York Times bestsellers and international publishing sensations. Among its many honors, Child 44 won the ITW 2009 Thriller Award for Best First Novel, The Strand Magazine 2008 Critics Award for Best First Novel, the CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger Award, and was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize.
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
In his third and final novel featuring Russian policeman Leo Demidov, Smith covers three decades in his protagonist's life, beginning in Stalinist Russia in 1950 when Demidov meets his soon-to-be-wife, Raisa. Then it's on to 1965, when the cold war thaws enough for Raisa and their two adopted daughters to travel to New York and get caught up in a deadly conspiracy. The book operates on several levels, as a spy thriller, a study of obsession, and a harsh criticism of political expediency, and narrator Dennis Boutsikaris finds a splendidly sardonic voice that captures all three. When it comes to dialogue, much of it from the mouths of Smith's carefully crafted Russian characters, Boutsikaris uses a minimal accent and a slightly brusque, typically Slavic manner of speech. Equally commendable is his subtle approach to female voices: a softening and mild shift in pitch. Worthy of special notice is his vocal choice for Jessie Austin, a world famous African-American singer and avowed Communist. It's vaguely Southern, educated, and filled with the wonder of the politically naive. A Grand Central hardcover. (Jan.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
Child 44, 2008, etc.) returns with more intrigue from behind the old Iron Curtain. Actually, a good chunk of the intrigue occurs on this side of the Atlantic. Leo Demidov is a loyal functionary, a good servant of the state and its apparatus, "a decorated soldier recruited to the ranks of the secret police after the Great Patriotic War." He is also sensitive to the Orwellian implications of his job, aware that open sedition isn't always the thing to look out for; more important are the incomplete or insincere expressions of love for the Great Leader and the system. Naturally, under such a regime even the most loyal of servants falls under suspicion, and on that point some of Smith's taut tale hinges on the introduction of some key players. One is an African-American singer named Jesse Austin, transparently modeled on Paul Robeson, who, "unlike many Negro singers," as one apparatchik dryly puts it, is unreligious--or better, "Communism is his church." When Austin falls to an assassin in New York, Demidov's wife, Raisa, traveling there on a cultural mission, is implicated, thanks in good part to a loyal cop on the capitalist side of the Wall, an FBI man who specializes in "nonlegal harassment" of suspected Communists and fellow travelers. Demidov is stymied when his controllers deny him permission to dig into the truth--and, nonlegally, he takes matters into his own hands, which puts him in some of the more precarious corners of the world, not least of them Afghanistan. Smith's tale spans years and continents, and the period details are exactly right even as he spins out an old-fashioned thriller that would do Ludlum and le Carr proud. The story is a little long, but it has a nicely creepy and--yes--Orwellian ending that amply repays the occasional detour in getting there. A big book, in every sense, that's sure to draw attention.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Long-suffering Leo Demidov, a hero of the Great Patriotic War, dutiful agent of Stalin's notorious MBG and disaffected former KGB agent, is now happily married to Raisa and loving father of Zoya and Elena. It's 1965, and Raisa is selected to lead a schoolchildren's chorus to the U.S. to lessen Cold War tensions. But the FBI and the KGB are both intent on creating an incident, and Raisa is fatally shot in New York. Half mad with grief, Leo demands permission to find her killer, but he is refused. Cut to 1980: Leo is an opium addict in Afghanistan, where he advises the Soviet's puppet Afghan government on building its secret police. Even through an opium haze, he still burns with the need to avenge Raisa's death. Agent 6 is the concluding volume of the trilogy that began with the critically acclaimed and best-selling Child 44 (2008) and was followed by The Secret Speech (2009). In these first two volumes, Smith brilliantly illuminated the horrors of Stalin's Russia and the Gulag. He also gave readers Demidov, duty-bound, introspective, enduring, and ultimately a figure both tragic and heroic. Cold War machinations and Russian blunders in Afghanistan can't measure up to Stalin's reign of terror as a backdrop, but this concluding installment still has Leo front and center, and that's plenty to add to another first-class, must-read crime novel.--Gaughan, Thomas Copyright 2010 Booklist
Library Journal Review
Fortified by formidable details of Soviet history, Smith's closing volume of the Leo Demidov trilogy (Child 44; The Secret Speech) knits together iconic characters and elements as Leo for 30 years inexorably seeks justice. In a devastating tragedy in 1965, his wife is killed while on a Cold War public relations trip to Manhattan, but Leo is denied any chance to investigate. He is assigned as a police adviser in Afghanistan, where events make it possible for him to get to New York. Though weary, he works to find out the truth behind Raisa's death. VERDICT Fans of Smith's first two books will avidly seek out the final chapter, though this one stands on its own as well. The Afghan interlude is a searing echo of today's headlines, while the buildup of suspense over several decades is the armchair equivalent of a jaw-jarringly extreme ride at an amusement park. [See Prepub Alert, 7/18/11.]-Barbara Conaty, Falls Church, VA (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.