Posts Tagged ‘eye of the red tsar’

Child 44

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Leo Demidov — a military hero working for the MGP — is ordered to tell a family that their son was not murdered, and that they must stop telling other people that he was murdered, or there will be dire consequences. Leo thinks nothing more of it, returning to a case he was working on earlier. Suddenly, Leo finds himself ordered to investigate his wife Raisa, who is being accused of working with Western spies.

Child 44, by Tom Rob Smith

Child 44, by Tom Rob Smith

Leo is faced with a tough decision: denounce the woman he loves and continue living in safety while she is executed, or go against the State and claim her innocent, sending them both to be executed. What he doesn’t know is, this won’t be the last tough decision he will be faced with.

Child 44 — based on a real crime spree — is crafted with twists and turns, and full of vivid depiction of Stalinist and post-Stalinist Russia in the 1950′s. As I read the story, I was also given a very accurate history lesson, making me feel as if I’d lived in Russia during that period. While the first historical fiction novel I read, Eye of the Red Tsar, was very good, it didn’t even come close to Child 44.

I decided to read Child 44 because while reading reviews of Eye of the Red Tsar, I came across one that said “Red Tsar” was very similar to Child 44. However, the only similarity is that both novels are set in Stalinist Russia. Pekkala, the main character in “Red Tsar,” is a royal investigator, and Stalin is depicted as an ally. In Child 44, Stalin is depicted as the exact leader he was. The novel uses tons of the quotes and rules that Russia was supposed to live by during his reign. Author Tom Rob Smith (Child 44) shows the sheer harshness of living in Russia during those times. While Sam Eastland (Eye of the Red Tsar) doesn’t fail to depict how tough those times were on the Russian people, he doesn’t come close. Both authors clearly did their research, but Smith made sure that he gave enough examples that the reader felt just as afraid as many of the citizens. There were times when I cried, swore aloud, or just mulled something over because it was just so horrible — and because I knew that things like it happened all of the time.

The pace of the novel is perfect. The main characters are showered with complications and betrayals, just as the novel itself is spun with twists and turns. Most authors might not be able to handle all of that action and make it believable. Tom Rob Smith does, and does it brilliantly.

When I read the last sentence of the novel, I wished it were the first. Luckily, Tom Rob Smith has already written a sequel that came out on April 1st, 2010, and he is currently working on the third and final book.

This was one gets five out of five from me. What did you think of it?

Eye of the Red Tsar Reading Group Topics: #2

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Now that I’ve finished Eye of the Red Tsar, I’ve decided to start tackling the Reading Group Topics provided by the author and publisher. I’ll be posting two a week, so if you’d like to follow along with me, download or print the PDF, stretch your fingers, and leave a comment with your thoughts!

Heads up: spoilers ahead! (more…)

Eye of the Red Tsar

Monday, May 10th, 2010
Eye of the Red Tsar, by Sam Eastland

Eye of the Red Tsar, by Sam Eastland

I went to the library a few days ago after work because I wanted to go for a walk, and the library is on the street intersecting the street our offices are located on. There’s nothing better than getting some exercise and getting a book out of the deal!

I decided to look at the new arrivals first, since that was how I found Joe Meno several months ago. I’m trying really hard to broaden my author horizon. When I was in high school, I didn’t read anything else besides Stephen King and Johnny the Homicidal Maniac. (Not that there’s anything wrong with either!) In the last few months, I’ve read a bunch of new authors. I’ve also been listening to a lot of Mastodon. Their new album, which is my favorite, has a song on it about the murder of the Romanovs. This song quickly became my favorite of theirs — before I even knew who Mastodon was! I’ve always been fascinated with the Romanovs. Maybe it’s because I’m part Russian and it’s in my blood to be interested in my ancestors’ history. Maybe it’s because I saw the movie Anastasia as a kid and could never get the fact that a whole family had been murdered for political reasons out of my head.

But when I saw Eye of the Red Tsar sitting on the shelf at the library, I pretty much knew I was going to read it. Before deciding, I read the synopsis on the inside of the jacket.

A decade [after the murder of the Romanov family], one man lives in purgatory, banished to a forest on the outskirts of humanity. Pekkala was once the most trusted secret agent of the Romanovs, the right-hand man of the Tsar himself. Now he is Prisoner 4745-P, living a harsh existence in which even the strongest vanish into the merciless Soviet winter.

But the state needs Pekkala one last time. The man who knew the Romanovs best is given a final mission: catch their killers, locate the royal child rumored to be alive, and give Stalin the international coup he craves…

I read the first few sentences, and quickly closed the book shut; the sooner I checked it out, the sooner I could read it!

Over the next couple of days, I was riveted. There were a couple of nights I stayed up well into early morning to keep reading. The book definitely started off slow; you can easily tell this is Sam Eastland’s first published novel. It gradually picks up speed, though, and I was interested enough to keep reading even when Eastland did a lot of telling rather than showing. About halfway through, however, it starts getting really interesting. There were enough twists and turns, and enough tidbit details about Pekkala (the main character), to keep me reading through cigarettes, meals, and even when I should have been sleeping.

Eastland crafted a very interesting character in Pekkala, known as the Emerald Eye because of his service to the Tsar. Pekkala begins investigation with his brother Anton and Lieutenant Kirov. Along the way, you get flashbacks of back story showing Pekkala’s and Anton’s childhood, Pekkala’s days with the Romanovs, and his many days of interrogation by Stalin, who wanted the location of the Tsar’s treasure.

There are so many things that make this book spellbinding, taking its own course from history and spinning a fantastic work of fiction. As much as I wanted Pekkala to solve the murder and find the rumored missing child (which is not, by the way, Anastasia), I also didn’t want the book to end.

It did, however, and even the ending is interesting, leaving room for a sequel if Eastland chose to do more with the characters.

At the back of the book, Eastland includes a section called “What Really Happened to the Romanovs”, which interested me because I never knew the full history, and while reading couldn’t separate fact from fiction (which was kind of cool, because it allowed me to get deeper into the story rather than picking it apart). While reading, I kept saying that I needed to pick up a history book about the Romanovs and the Revolution. There are a lot of fascinating rumors that surround their murder, and reading Eye of the Red Tsar has piqued my interest again (and, of course, Mastodon).

If you’re a history buff or just like murder mysteries or suspense, Eye of the Red Tsar is a great work of historical fiction. I give it Five Freaking Stars.


UPDATE: There is going to be a sequel, published in 2011! You can see photos from the Revolution, a preview from the next book, and the “What Really Happened” section all at the Inspector Pekkala website. (more…)