Our woman in Moscow A novel

Beatriz Williams

Large print - 2021

To save her sister, who, along with her American diplomat husband and children, is trapped behind the Iron Curtain, Ruth Macallister embarks on a dangerous mission, and as the sisters race toward safety, a dogged Soviet agent forces them to make a heartbreaking choice.

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Subjects
Genres
Romantic suspense fiction
Historical fiction
Thrillers (Fiction)
Spy fiction
Romance fiction
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Harper Large Print, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Beatriz Williams (author)
Edition
First Harper Large Print edition
Physical Description
578 pages (large print) ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780063090231
9781648383267
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Williams (Her Last Flight, 2020) again blends historical fiction and romance in this engaging tale of Cold War espionage. In 1952, Ruth Macallister is running a successful modeling agency in New York. Her twin sister, Iris, is apparently in Moscow, having accompanied her husband, Sasha Digby, an American diplomat, when he defected to the Soviet Union in 1948. The sisters parted on bad terms in 1940, when Ruth left Rome, where the two were living as WWII raged around them, and Iris stayed on with Sasha, eventually moving to London. Now, after years of silence, Ruth receives a postcard from Iris, who pleads with her to come to Moscow. A visit from a CIA counterintelligence agent, Sumner Fox, convinces Ruth to go the USSR, posing as Sumner's wife, to help the Digbys escape to America. The setup reeks of melodrama, but Williams, effectively juggling the narrative between the points of view of Ruth, Iris, and a Russian KGB agent, moves back and forth in time to build all the principals into full-bodied characters while delivering detail-rich portraits of wartime Italy, glittery fifties Manhattan, and grayed-out Moscow.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Williams (Her Last Flight) captivates with the story of an American woman's effort to reunite with her twin sister after her defection to the Soviet Union. In 1952, Ruth Macallister, a secretary in New York City and de facto manager of a modeling agency, receives a visit from FBI agent Sumner Fox with questions about her twin sister, Iris, whom she has not seen for 12 years. Sumner tells Ruth her sister defected to Russia in 1948 with her husband, Sasha Digby, a former diplomat who worked with the twins' brother at the U.S. embassy in Rome in 1940. Now that the KGB suspects Sasha of working as a double agent, the Digbys' lives are in danger. Sumner devises a plan to have Ruth travel to Moscow to help Iris during her pregnancy, and he will accompany her undercover as her spouse. Ruth and Sumner's efforts to extract the Digbys from the Soviet Union, however, are complicated by the KGB. Williams sharply observes the inequities women faced at the end of WWII and the simmering suspense of the Cold War. Historical fiction fans will be riveted by the complex family relationships and the intriguing portrayal of espionage. Agent: Alexandra Machinist, ICM Partners. (June)

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

Williams uses the true story of the Cambridge Five, a ring of spies who passed information to the Soviet Union during and just after World War II, as a jumping-off point for her newest historical novel (after Her Last Flight). In 1948, Iris Digby, her diplomat husband Sasha, and their two children suddenly disappear from their home in England. Four years later, Ruth Macallister receives a postcard from Iris asking her to travel to Moscow, now behind the Iron Curtain, to help with her latest pregnancy. Though they're twin sisters, Ruth and Iris haven't spoken in more than a decade. Despite their estrangement, and because she's been visited by a federal agent asking questions about Iris, Ruth is determined to help bring her sister home, even as the KGB is closing in. VERDICT Williams has a sure hand in this deceptively quiet novel, told from the perspective of three different women. She expertly shifts between family drama and a suspenseful espionage plot, and makes every word and note count. Fans of Kate Quinn and Pam Jenoff will be looking for this one.--Jane Jorgenson, Madison P.L., WI

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

Twin sisters find themselves caught up in a Russian spy ring at the height of the Cold War. In 1952, Ruth Macallister, a former fashion model and the power behind the throne at a Manhattan modeling agency, receives a postcard from her twin sister, Iris Digby--sent from Moscow. When FBI man and former Yale fullback Sumner Fox comes sniffing around, Ruth at first withholds this information, but later the two will team up, pretending to be newlyweds, to go to Moscow with the intent of extracting Iris from the clutches of the Stalin regime. Or at least that's Ruth's intent--Sumner's mixed motives are a source of more confusion than intrigue. The 1952 sections, narrated by Ruth, alternate with Iris' story, set in 1948 Great Britain, detailing how her marriage is foundering. She always knew her husband, Sasha Digby, was a spy for the Russians, a mole embedded in the U.S. diplomatic corps. Lately, however, his drunkenness appears to have rendered him all but useless to his handlers. Iris met Sasha during the sisters' prewar Roman holiday in 1940 and, infatuated, married him in haste. Sasha's frequent all-night benders have definitely debloomed the rose. The 1948 narrative slows down the present action without really adding much crucial insight into how, or why, Sasha and Iris end up defecting, with their children, to Moscow or even why, after his poor performance, Moscow would want him. Making occasional appearances in the 1952 timeline is Lyudmila Ivanova, a tough-as-nails KGB operative and a single mother due to her informing on her husband, who was sent to the gulag. He's not the only family member she's turned in. Lyudmila has been assigned to monitor expat defectors like Sasha. Iris is the most fully developed and sympathetic character here. Ruth is another iteration of the wisecracking dame who has appeared in so many Williams novels, and Lyudmila seems patterned after Greta Garbo in Ninotchka, except that this doctrinaire minion of Stalin wouldn't be caught dead in a rom-com. A cumbersome plot weighs down this would-be spy thriller. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.