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Fiction. Thriller. HTML:NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER � A NEW YORK TIMES NOTABLE BOOK � �Sharply, evocatively written and elaborately plotted . . . [Red Square] should find as many friends as did Gorky Park.��The Washington Post Book World Back from exile in the hellish reaches of the Soviet Union, homicide investigator Arkady Renko discovers that his country, his Moscow, even his job, are nearly dead. But his enemies are very much alive, and foremost among them are the powerful black-market crime lords of the Russian mafia. Hounded by this terrifying new underworld, chased by the ruthless minions of the newly rich and powerful, and tempted by his great love, defector Irina Asanova, Arkady can only hope desperately for escape. But fate has something else in store. �Gripping . . . Smith at his best.��The Wall Street Journal �A crackling suspense thriller.��The Boston Globe �Fascinating . . . powerful.��The Philadelphia Inquirer �Absorbing.��The New York Times �Extraordinary.��Time.… (more)
User reviews
Again, we’ve got an up close and personal view into Soviet life. At this point in time the Communist Party is losing control of the country and with the wall in Germany now down, time is short for life as they know it. When Arkady lands in Germany he sees exactly how much the Soviet Union is suffering. Suddenly there is food aplenty and consumer goods as far as the eye can see.
The reunion with Irina is painful to read. She is hurt and trying not to let herself become vulnerable to him again. At first she seems overly bitchy and cold. Later she tells him that she looked for him. She tried to find him. Moved all around and tried to figure ways to draw him out of the Soviet Union. But Arkady’s conviction that if he so much as thinks about Irina their enemies will find her and kill her keeps him from even considering the possibility that she might try to find him. It’s heart wrenching and painful, but when they do come together it is very sweet and very poignant.
In a sense I wish this were the last Arkady Renko novel because it ends on a relatively high note. With Irina home and by his side and his professional prospects somewhat intact, they have hope. We have hope that they will succeed. After all they’ve been through it’s the least the world can do for them.
I spent too much time trying to determine who were the good guys and who were the bad guys and at the end, I felt that the book wasn't finished as there were characters and scenarios that I still wanted to know more about. Maybe a second reading will solve that.....
So that is the background of the book which tells the story of Investigator Arkady Renko looking for the murderer of a Jewish mafia boss who was collaborating with Renko. Renko has recently returned to Moscow after spending some time in Siberia and aboard fishing trawlers for infractions under the Communist rule which put him into exile. Now, with glasnost and perestroika, Renko has been returned to his office as Chief Investigator and he even has a staff although equipment for forensic investigation is virtually nonexistent. As Renko follows the clues he learns that there is some connection with Munich, Germany. He has also just heard his former lover and defector, Irina, broadcasting for Liberty Radio from Munich. He manages to get to Munich and, despite having no official status and almost no money, he starts to zero in on the culprit(s). He also contacts Irina who initially professes to have almost forgotten him. As the story unfolds he and Irina keep interacting. In fact, Irina has some key information for Renko although she is not aware of the connection. Irina and Renko return to Moscow just after the coup attempt and the story concludes on the steps of the White House (the Soviet parliamentary building).
Smith evokes the tenor of the times magnificently. This is a work of history as well as mystery and it was superbly written. The contrast between life in Moscow with shortages of everything and the excessive opulence in Germany are shocking. The mystery itself takes so many twists and turns that at times I had trouble keeping up but it was worth it. I haven't read the book that is set between Gorky Park and Red Square but that is a lack I intend to remedy soon.
A very good representation of the chaos in Russia after the fall of the Iron Curtain.
Set at the brink of the 1991 “August Coup” that precipitated the final breakup of the Soviet Union, Red Square is as moody and grim as all the Renko novels. Mafioso capitalists – still more robber than baron – vie for control of the fledgling new economy while people stand in line for beets and Party apparatchiks cling to the shreds of power. Smith captures the inherent dichotomies with snapshots such as this scene at the end of Renko’s interview of a suspect at the man’s Western-style sports bar:
Borya . . . dropped his voice. . . . “[D]o you think I’d endanger all this, everything I’ve achieved, to take some sort of primitive revenge? That’s the old mentality. We have to catch up with the rest of the world or we’re going to be left behind. We’ll all be in empty buildings and starving to death. We have to change. Do you have a card?” he asked suddenly.
“Party card?”
“We collect business cards and have a drawing once a month for a bottle of Chivas Regal.” Borya controlled a smile, barely.
It is detailed touches like this – as well as emotionally evocative lines such as “despair saturated the air” and “the threadbare overcoats of Soviet crime” – that create the authentic atmosphere in Smith’s novels and raise them above the typical thriller.
Also posted on Rose City Reader.
Arkady Renko, finally returned to Moscow from exile, investigates
In the first two books the Communist Soviet regime was an ever-present antagonistic force that worked against Renko nearly as much as the actual criminals he fought. In Red Square, even though this force is still evident and still dangerous, its power is diminished.
While this was not the best entry in the series, it was still enjoyable. Martin Cruz Smith did a good job giving the reader a sense of Russian life in those bleak and tumultuous times. It will be interesting to see where the series goes from here.