Liberation movements

Olen Steinhauer

Book - 2006

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MYSTERY/Steinhauer, Olen
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Subjects
Published
New York : St. Martin's Minotaur 2006.
Language
English
Main Author
Olen Steinhauer (-)
Edition
1st ed
Item Description
Sequel to: 36 Yalta Boulevard.
Physical Description
291 p. ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780312332044
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Steinhauer's dazzling fourth book in his series about various police and intelligence agents in an unnamed Communist-era Eastern European country gives a large role to Brano Sev, the seriously conflicted spy who starred in the previous entry, 36 Yalta Boulevard (2005). Sev sums up the new book's theme when he says to a younger subordinate, "Intelligence work is precisely what it says it's about intelligence. We are not murderers." There's some irony here: we know that Sev has killed several people himself. But there's also an unexpected note of humanity, as Sev supervises the investigation by two junior agents of a murder in Russian-occupied Prague in 1968 that's later tied to a plane hijacked by Armenian terrorists on its way to Istanbul in 1975. Another new element is the Turkish capital, alive and yeasty compared to the drab, restricted home city of 36 Yalta Boulevard. And the emergence of a major female character a homicide investigator looking for personal justice shows how a skilled writer working at the top of his form can keep a series from faltering. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

This fourth entry in Steinhauer's (The Bridge of Sighs) Eastern Bloc crime series deposits us in the late summer of 1968, as "the flowers of Prague's spring" are being crushed by the Warsaw Pact's invading tanks. In a nearby unnamed country, Brano Sev of the Ministry of State Security, the protagonist of 36 Yalta Boulevard, is now a colonel in his late fifties. He and his officers, Capt. Gavra Noukas and homicide inspector Katja Drdova, all have secrets to hide and a major crime to solve. Armenian hijackers have blown up an airplane en route to Istanbul, aboard which was a fellow officer of Armenian origin. Was the Ministry involved in the plane's destruction? Is there a connection to a crime committed seven years earlier? To find the answers, Gavra and Katja must confront their own demons. Using alternating time lines, reverse chronology, and disrupted sequence, Steinhauer again displays his masterful manipulation of character, plot, and reader expectations. Tightly entwined story lines, compact scenes that evoke a grim world while capturing character subtleties, and a style pared to the essential make this a fast, intriguing read. Highly recommended. [See Prepub Mystery, LJ 4/1/06.]-Ronnie H. Terpening, Univ. of Arizona, Tucson (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Starred Review. This fourth entry in Steinhauer's (The Bridge of Sighs) Eastern Bloc crime series deposits us in the late summer of 1968, as the flowers of Prague's spring are being crushed by the Warsaw Pact's invading tanks. In a nearby unnamed country, Brano Sev of the Ministry of State Security, the protagonist of 36 Yalta Boulevard, is now a colonel in his late fifties. He and his officers, Capt. Gavra Noukas and homicide inspector Katja Drdova, all have secrets to hide and a major crime to solve. Armenian hijackers have blown up an airplane en route to Istanbul, aboard which was a fellow officer of Armenian origin. Was the Ministry involved in the plane's destruction? Is there a connection to a crime committed seven years earlier? To find the answers, Gavra and Katja must confront their own demons. Using alternating time lines, reverse chronology, and disrupted sequence, Steinhauer again displays his masterful manipulation of character, plot, and reader expectations. Tightly entwined story lines, compact scenes that evoke a grim world while capturing character subtleties, and a style pared to the essential make this a fast, intriguing read. Highly recommended. [See Prepub Mystery, LJ 4/1/06.]-- Ronnie H. Terpening, Univ. of Arizona, Tucson

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In 1975, clashing cops investigate the explosion of a Turkish passenger plane. The story is told in short chapters from the perspective of multiple characters. Three emerge: Peter Husak, a Czech student in the eye of the revolutionary storm in 1968; Gavra Noukas, a young member of the secret police of an unnamed USSR satellite state; and Katja Drdova, an even younger homicide detective in the same country. Both Gavra and Katja are called in to investigate when, on April 23, 1975, Turkish Airlines Flight 54 blows up in mid-air after being hijacked by the Army of the Liberation, an Armenian terrorist group. Katja's colleague Libarid Terzian was aboard the plane and cannot be immediately cleared of suspicion because of his Armenian heritage. This link brings Katja into the probe. Major Brano Sev, the hero of Steinhauer's 36 Yalta Boulevard (2005), here appears to be a bluff bureaucrat, guiding his protg Gavra, a closeted homosexual with a healthy libido. Indeed Brano, whom Gavra calls "the old man," feeds his underlings (and the reader) bits of evidence piecemeal, challenging both to put the disparate pieces together. The saga of Peter Husak, ensnared in Prague Spring, runs as a parallel narrative to the terrorism plot until, late in the story, his alternate identity and its relation to the other protagonists is revealed. A suspicious German migr leads to a list of likely terrorists, and Katja uncovers a message left at their hotel by a young woman passenger named Zrinka Martrich. The scarcity of official information about Zrinka raises red flags; Gavra visits a doctor who treated Zrinka for mental illness as well as her charismatic brother, with whom he later enters into a volatile affair. When Gavra returns to the doctor, he finds him murdered, a chilling indication that he's on the right track. Cool and cerebral crime thriller, full of political nuance and bathed in irony. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One Peter 1968 "Two days ago---Saturday---we find you in the middle of Cÿeské Budeÿjovice, walking the main street in a daze. Correct me if I'm wrong, please. You don't have the documents to be in Cÿeské Budeÿjovice, because you're supposed to be here, in Prague. You're a student of . . ." The Slovak officer bent over the table, the ceiling lamp shining on his hairless scalp as he squinted at his clipboard. "Musicology. A musician?" "I study theory," said Peter, "but I don't play." "I see." As the officer stood, his chair scratched the stone floor. "I'm not a mystic, comrade; I can't read minds. So, before sitting down with you here, I ask the faculty; I ask your roommate, this Josef. A feisty one, he is. Almost spits in my face when he tells me you're in Austria by now---safe from the Russian tanks that, as he puts it, will never crush the flowers of Prague's spring." The officer rubbed the edge of his long nose, mustache twitching. "But headstrong Josef is wrong, because by the time of his rash statement you're back in Prague, aren't you? Our esteemed Warsaw Pact comrade-soldiers have brought you and other sundry hooligans back from the Austrian border. Funny, no?" He blinked twice, waiting, but Peter didn't answer. "According to your roommate, you left on the twentieth of August, just before the liberating tanks arrived. With your two friends. And now---Josef Kucera tells me---you're all free." The officer tapped a brief rhythm on the tabletop. "Josef tells me that you and your friends will take the plight of Czechoslovakia to the ears of the world. He's very melodramatic, don't you think?" Ten minutes earlier, this Slovak officer had introduced himself as Comrade Captain Poborsky, but Peter had trouble matching that name to the bald, mustached uniform that squatted beside him and rapped knuckles on the table. "Yes," Peter told him. "Josef can sometimes be melodramatic." Captain Poborsky stood again. "Now, I feel relatively sure, at least, of who you are. Peter Husák, student of musicology, amateur rabble-rouser. We have reports on you---nothing deeply troubling, just the occasional demonstration against Russian . . . occupation, as you put it. Would you put it that way?" "I don't know. Maybe." "Trust me. As a man who works closely with the Russians, I can honestly inform you that their intent here is not occupation, nor is it to control us---a country simply cannot control the actions of another. No, their intent is normalization. The Czechoslovak Socialist Republic had already been invaded before the twentieth of August---by ideologues and saboteurs from the West. They just didn't use tanks. And the Warsaw Pact soldiers you see around here, they're volunteers from all the People's Republics, helping us to begin the process of normalization. Nineteen sixty-eight will go down as the year Western expansionism was stopped in its tracks." He tilted his head. "You're a bright kid, I can tell that. You know what I'm talking about." Poborsky---and this was hardest to believe---winked. "I'm less interested in your minor transgressions---under the sway, of course, of foreign influences---than in the identity of your friends. The ones you left with. I'll find out soon enough, but you might as well tell me now. You see, with those open borders we have no idea who's in or out of the country. It's a bureaucratic nightmare. You can imagine." Peter affirmed this with a quick nod. "So?" Peter focused beyond the bald Státn' bezpecÿnost, or simply StB, officer to the corner of the damp room. From there, Poborsky's assistant, a stocky Czech worker with a three-day beard, had stared at Peter during the whole talk. He looked tired in the eyes, because Peter was only one of hundreds he'd had to manhandle from their humid cells down to this cool basement over the last week. "Peter," said Captain Poborsky. "I don't have all day." "Toman. My best friend. Toman Samulka." The state security officer produced a pencil and a notepad from his breast pocket. "Toman's twenty-two as well?" "Yes." "And the other friend?" Saying Toman's name was as simple as revealing your favorite brand of beer. Budweiser Budvar. Bood-vahr, almost liking it merely for the rhythm of the name. "Come on." Captain Poborsky bent so his hands were on his knees and he was looking into Peter's face. "Our prisons are bloated, but that has no effect on how many jokers we send to them." "Ivana Vogler." "You're not lying to me, right?" "Of course not." "And where are they now?" "In Austria." "You're sure of this?" "I watched them cross over." "And you?" "What about me?" "You're not in Austria," said the captain, "though that's why you left Prague. Your two comrades, Toman and Ivana, they made it. And you---as you've admitted---were there to watch them cross the border. Why did you stay behind?" "Because . . ." Peter had talked himself into this lie without thinking, and now he'd have to hold on to it. "I don't know why." "Do you regret your decision?" "What?" "Sitting here, now, in this claustrophobic room. Do you regret your decision to remain in the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic?" Peter raised his head to look at the officer squarely, because this might save him. "No," he said. "I'd never leave my country." They held him two more days in a hot cell with ten other students who had been picked up in western Czechoslovakia on their way to Austria, but the questions were over. He sat against the stone wall, sweating, and listened to his fellow prisoners, their pronouncements of outrage and their honest but short-lived bursts of fear. Daniel, a Slovak philologist, announced that he was going underground as soon as they let him out. "There'll be partisans, you can bet on it. And I'll join them. Fucking Russians." The tanks had entered Prague on the night of 20 August, last Tuesday. The crowds that over that heady spring and summer had filled the streets, forming impromptu committees and rallies to reevaluate socialism in their country, came out once again, now to debate theories of socialist independence with soldiers on the backs of tanks. Dubcÿek had insisted that no one fight the soldiers---he didn't want another Budapest---and so in nearly all cases the arguments were only verbal. But Peter had seen none of it. As soon as the tanks were sighted in the suburbs, he and Toman and Ivana loaded up their rucksacks and packed themselves into the back of a Russian ZIL truck Toman's father had borrowed from his factory. That only took them as far as Tábor, where the engine gave out. Toman's father kissed all their cheeks, wiped away a single tear, and took the train back to Prague. Then they began to walk. When the prisoners' lectures went on, Peter smiled and nodded but seldom spoke. He had marched with these kinds of people before the tanks arrived, never really understanding the slogans. He understood the language---socialismu lidskou tvár, socialism with a human face, was one of his favorites---but politics and economics had never been in his sphere of interest. He'd grown up in this system, and it was because of this system that he'd been able to leave that miserable farm in Encs and begin studies in Prague. Yet he marched, because, more than language or even music, he was interested in Ivana Vogler, girlfriend of his oldest friend, Toman. When she announced that it was time for them all to become politically involved, he learned to march and shout as if he knew what it was all about. "You're not a spy, are you?" Peter looked up as Daniel squatted beside him. "What?" The philologist scratched his ten-day beard. "You sit here and listen to everything we say, as if you're collecting information. Where did you resist?" "I tried to get out. To Austria." "But you didn't make it?" "The soldiers caught up with me." Daniel glanced back at the others in the cell. "Did they get anything out of you? Names?" "I didn't have any names to give." "So you're one of us?" He grinned. "A hooligan?" "I marched," said Peter. "I signed petitions. I suppose that makes me a hooligan, too." Copyright (c) 2006 by Olen Steinhauer Excerpted from Liberation Movements by Olen Steinhauer All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.