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  1 Tatiana: An Arkady Renko Novel
Author: Smith, Martin Cruz
    Series: Arkady Renko novel, #8
 
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Class: Fiction
Age: Adult
Language: English
LC: PS3569.M
Print Run: 125000
ISBN-13: 9781439140215
LCCN: 2013026426
Imprint: Simon & Schuster
Pub Date: 11/12/2013
Availability: Out of Stock Indefinitely
List: $25.99
  Hardcover
Physical Description: 292 pages ; 24 cm H 9", W 6.12", D 1.1", 1.23 lbs.
LC Series:
Brodart Sources: Brodart's Blockbuster List
Brodart's Insight Catalog: Adult
Brodart's TOP Adult Titles
Bibliographies: Fiction Core Collection, 17th ed.
Fiction Core Collection, 18th ed.
Fiction Core Collection, 19th ed.
Fiction Core Collection, 20th ed.
Los Angeles Times Bestsellers List
New York Times Bestsellers List
New York Times Bestsellers: Adult Fiction
Publishers Weekly Bestsellers
Awards: Booklist Starred Reviews
Kirkus Best Books
Kirkus Starred Reviews
Library Journal Starred Reviews
Publishers Weekly Starred Reviews
Starred Reviews: Booklist
Kirkus Reviews
Library Journal
Publishers Weekly
TIPS Subjects: Mystery/Detective Fiction
Suspense/Thriller
BISAC Subjects: FICTION / General
FICTION / Mystery & Detective / General
FICTION / Thrillers / General
LC Subjects: FICTION / General
FICTION / Mystery & Detective / General
FICTION / Thrillers
Kaliningrad (Kaliningradskai︠a︡ oblastʹ, Russia), Fiction
Mafia, Fiction
Mystery fiction
Police, Russia (Federation), Moscow, Fiction
Political corruption, Fiction
Renko, Arkady (Fictitious character), Fiction
Renko, Arkady, (Fictitious character), Fiction
Suspense fiction
Women journalists, Crimes against, Fiction
SEARS Subjects: Adventure fiction
Kaliningrad (Kaliningradskai︠a︡ oblastʹ, Russia), Fiction
Mafia, Fiction
Mystery fiction
Police, Russia (Moscow), Fiction
Political corruption, Fiction
Renko, Arkady (Fictional character), Fiction
Women journalists, Fiction
Reading Programs:
 
Annotations
Brodart's TOP Adult Titles | 08/01/2013
More than mere coincidence connects a reporter's death in Moscow to a mob billionaire's murder and extravagant burial that same week, and investigator Arkady Renko is out to prove it. He'll travel dangerous New Russia as he ponders the voice with which the late Tatiana Petrovna, a reporter who knew no fear, recounts chilling crimes. His quest will take him to a so-called 'secret city' set apart from Russia. There may be no going back. 304pp., 125K, Auth res: CA, Tour
Starred Reviews:
Booklist | 11/01/2013
The more Russia changes, the more it supports Arkady Renko's unremittingly bleak worldview: "I'm a cynic. I believe in car wrecks, airline disasters, missing children, self-immolation, suffocation with pillows." And, yet, he soldiers on, a cop perpetually on the outs with his superiors, trying to solve cases that no one wants solved. "I have no authority anywhere," Arkady explains, "but I like to understand things." But things, in the New Russia, are getting harder and harder to understand. Arkady knows corruption, of course, but the new corruption, from officialdom through the Mob--now as powerful as the party ever was--leaves even a lifetime cynic shaking his head in wonder and dismay. The apparent suicide of investigative reporter Tatiana Petrovna--Was she really murdered? Is she even dead?--sends Arkady on another of his ill-advised searches for answers, this time taking him to Kaliningrad, an isolated, Mob-dominated city with the highest crime rate in Russia. What Arkady finds there is a grayed-out surreal landscape, postapocalyptic but without an apocalypse, in which the answers he seeks are as elusive as they are lethal. That Smith has kept this series going for more than 30 years, finding through decades of change more and more reasons for Arkady to justify his cynicism, says much about the modern world--and much about Arkady's bedrock humanity in the face of snowballing absurdity. If a man believes in self-immolation, Tatiana asks Arkady, what doesn't he believe in? "I don't believe in saints," Arkady replies. "They get people killed.". Ott, Bill. 304p. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2013.
Kirkus Reviews | 05/01/2013
In Smith's latest Arkady Renko novel, the Russian investigator seeks the truth about a young reporter's apparent suicide. Tatiana Petrovna is one of the last occupants of a Kaliningrad apartment building that developers want to raze. When she falls six stories to her death, authorities are quick to rule the tragedy as a suicide. Renko suspects otherwise and gets his boss' permission to look into it. The young woman had been a troublemaker, with a nose for rooting out the corruption widely known to be rampant in Russia, so few people seem to miss her. Renko can't view the body, because police say they are unable to produce it. This certainly won't stop him, though. Fans of his earlier adventures (Gorky Park, 1981; Red Square, 1992) know he's not a flashy fellow, perhaps in part because he walks around with a bullet lodged in his skull. But he is an honorable man, persistent in asking questions, raising doubts and following leads. At the center of the plot is a notebook that appears to be filled with symbols looking like gibberish. Can Renko find someone to decipher it? Sitting on the Baltic seacoast, Kaliningrad is portrayed as a bleak industrial city that's probably on no one's vacation itinerary. The novel suggests a deep cynicism pervading Russian society, where officials and businessmen are expected to bribe and steal. For example, submarines costing hundreds of millions of dollars may sink into the ocean and never resurface since half the money goes to graft instead of craft. Smith is a master storyteller, delivering sharp dialogue, a tight plot, memorable descriptions and an understated hero in Arkady Renko. Anyone who enjoys crime novels but hasn't read Smith is in for a treat. Read this book, then look for other Arkady Renko adventures. 304pg. KIRKUS MEDIA LLC, c2013.
Library Journal | 09/01/2013
One of the most affecting memes emerging from Russia today is that of a crusading woman journalist whose quest illuminates the darkest reaches of post-Soviet iniquity. Arkady Renko, also a crusader for truth and justice, finds the official explanation of journalist Tatiana Petrovna's death (inspired by the real-life murder of journalist Anna Politkovskaya) fishy and follows his nose to the murky enclave of Kaliningrad. There he grapples with a horrific plot among Chinese shipbuilders, the Russian mafia, and defense agency profiteers to make a rotten deal that will lead to a bonanza for the bad guys. Renko may be reaching the last of his fabled nine lives in this eighth chapter (after Three Stations) of the Russian police inspector's epic life. VERDICT Burnished to a fine sheen, this tale has it all: a high-velocity plot complete with diabolically clever codes, endearing chess-playing teenagers, patricide, and death-defying Renko, still indomitable despite a scarred and weary hide. Pair Renko with Stuart Kaminsky's Inspector Rostnikov, and throw in Brett Ghelfi's gun-for-hire Alexei Volkovoy to achieve an unbeatable season of well-written and crackling reading enjoyment. [See Prepub Alert, 5/20/13.]. Barbara Conaty, Falls Church, VA. 304p. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2013.
Publishers Weekly | 09/09/2013
In Smith's riveting seventh Arkady Renko novel (after 2010's Three Stations), Renko, now a "Senior Investigator for Very Important Cases," looks into the apparent suicide of crusading investigative journalist Tatiana Petrovna, who fell from a window to her death in Moscow. Renko's bosses have no problem accepting the suicide theory, but Renko and his loyal partner and friend, Det. Sgt. Victor Orlov, continue to search for answers. Smith spins a complex plot involving the Russian mafia, a teenage genius struggling to crack the code of Petrovna's notebook, and an excursion to Kaliningrad, the isolated Russian enclave on the Baltic. While Petrovna may be a candidate for sainthood (she's evidently modeled on real-life reporter Anna Politkovskaya), the most intriguing "character" after Renko is contemporary Russia--freer than it was at the height of the cold war, but at least as corrupt and vastly more unequal--into which Smith offers many insights. Agent: Andrew Nurnberg, Andrew Nurnberg Associates (U.K.). (Nov.). 304p. PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2013.
Journal Reviews
BookPage | 11/01/2013
They don't make cops much more world-weary than Moscow homicide investigator Arkady Renko, who has remained steadfast in his principles while trying to stay afloat in the vast sea of corruption that is post-Soviet Union Russia. Author Martin Cruz Smith puts it succinctly in the opening pages of his latest Renko thriller, Tatiana: "As for himself, Arkady knew he should quit the prosecutor's office. He should have years ago, but there was always a reason to stay and semblance of control, as if a man falling with an anvil in his hands could be said to be in control." Due to his integrity and dogged determination, Renko has been sidelined with junk work, kept away from active and sensitive investigations. So, like any good investigator, he strikes out on his own, this time probing the suspicious death of a rabble-rousing journalist. The police are only too happy to write it off as a suicide, thus sweeping her untidy remains under the deep, plush carpets of Moscow's new power elite. To say that Smith is in top form with Tatiana would beg the question: When has he not been in top form? Smith balances plot, characters and atmosphere with talents equal to the best writers in the genre, and his latest effort is guaranteed to please his longtime fans and likely to win him many new ones. 304pg. BOOKPAGE, c2013.
Library Journal Prepub Alert | 05/20/2013
Famed for Arkady Renko, the sharp, incorruptible, quietly compassionate police inspector who first appeared in Gorky Park, Smith has two Hammett Prizes and a Golden Dagger Award to his name. But this book is billed as something more than mystery, with Arkady's latest case reflecting troubles in the new Russia. After investigative reporter Tatiana Petrovna dies in a fall from the sixth floor of a Moscow apartment building, Arkady listens to tapes made by Tatiana that detail the cover-up of terrible crimes. His investigation leads him to Kaliningrad, geographically cut off from the rest of Russia, and a teenage chess hustler named Zhenya. Cultural study, character study, packet of thrills-this book should keep you busy. 304p. LJ Prepub Alert Online Review. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2013.
9781439140215,dl.it[0].title
Review Citations
New York Times Book Review | 11/17/2013