Cold victory A novel

Karl Marlantes

Book - 2024

"Helsinki, 1947. Finland teeters between the Soviet Union and the West. Everyone is being watched. A wrong look or a wrong word could end in catastrophe. Natalya Bobrova, from Russia, and Louise Koski, from the United States, are young wives of their country's military attachés. When they meet at an embassy party, their husbands, Arnie and Mikhail, both world-class skiers, drunkenly challenge each other to a friendly-but secret-cross-country wilderness race. Louise is delighted, but Natalya is worried. Stalin and Beria's secret police rule with unforgiving brutality. If news of the race gets out and Mikhail loses, Natalya knows it would mean his death, her imprisonment, and the loss of her two children. Meanwhile, Louise, wh...o is childless, uses the race as an opportunity to raise money for a local orphanage, naive to the danger it will bring to Natalya and her family. Too late to stop Louise's scheme, a horrified Natalya watches as news of the race spreads across the globe as newspapers and politicians spin it as a symbolic battle: freedom versus communism. Desperate to undo her mistake, Louise must reach Arnie to tell him to throw the race and save Mikhail-but how? The two racers are in a world of their own, unreachable in Finland's arctic wilderness."--

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Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Atlantic Monthly Press 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Karl Marlantes (author)
Edition
First Grove Atlantic hardcover edition
Physical Description
345 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780802161420
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

A cross-country ski race between former soldiers snowballs into a Cold War crisis, but the real high-stakes diplomacy occurs between the competitors' wives. The year is 1947. Louise Koski, sincere but naive, accompanies her attaché husband, Arnie, on a posting to Helsinki, where a fragile calm hides deep fissures. Her foil is Natalya Bobrova, the reserved, wary wife of Red Army officer Mikhail. When the men's drunken boasting prompts an endurance challenge--a frigid week-long trek across northern Finland--Louise and Natalya reach a tentative détente and find common cause in raising money for a cash-strapped orphanage. But Louise's well-intentioned plan to use the ski race as a fundraising vehicle collides with the Stalin regime's ruthlessness, and terrible things will happen if Mikhail loses the race. Marlantes' (Deep River, 2019) well-plotted, briskly moving novel explores the psychological afterlife of war. The men may court death on the tundra, but their needs are uncomplicated. It's the women who, in building cross-cultural bridges and making impossible sacrifices, truly demonstrate sisu (Finnish for "toughness in the face of hopelessness").

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

Marlantes (Deep River) sets his stirring story of innocents abroad in 1946 Finland as the Cold War is heating up. Arnie Koski is a taciturn Finnish American and champion skier assigned as the military attaché to the American legation in Helsinki. His wife, Louise, is an Oklahoman and former sorority president whose guilelessness contrasts with the savvy machinations of American and Soviet agents who are spying on them. At their first embassy party, Arnie and his Soviet counterpart, Mikhail Bobrov, who met as allies during the war, get drunk and challenge each other to a clandestine ski race through Northern Finland. As they prepare for the 500-kilometer course ("their own little Olympics"), Louise attempts to befriend Mikhail's glamorous and wary wife, Natalya, and, in a subplot that causes the novel to drag, raise money for a Finnish orphanage. Owing to Louise's carelessness, the ski race gets picked up by the press and spun into a proxy battle between democracy and communism. Louise's naivete strains credulity, but the novel comes alive in its last third, as the former soldiers finally embark on the race, having agreed on acceptable types and doses of performance enhancing drugs but unprepared for the dire stakes, as Mikhail's death is all but certain should he lose and embarrass the Soviet Union. Marlantes sticks the landing in this satisfying drama. (Jan.)

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

Marlantes (Matterhorn; Deep River) delves into the intricacies of post-World War II alliances in this tense historical novel with the feel of a political thriller. Americans Arnie and Louise Koski arrive in Finland at the end of 1946 for their first diplomatic posting, unsure of what awaits them. As both the United States and the Soviet Union wrangle for political and ideological control of the war-torn country, the Koskis begin a tentative friendship with their Russian counterparts, Mikhail Bobrov and Natalya Bobrova. A friendly bet and a naive idea plunge all four into unexpected danger. Narrator Bronson Pinchot juggles accents and intonations masterfully as he represents the quartet of main characters and the wider international scope of the early Cold War. The dialogue and action have Pinchot indicating the use of three or even four languages within a single scene. Pinchot also excels at contrasting Louise's innocence and frequent thoughtlessness with Natalya's wary tight control of herself. Listeners will be on the edge of their seat as the web of paranoia and brinksmanship pulls tighter around them. VERDICT Recommended for those who love the tense action of Matthew Quirk's The Night Agent and Stella Rimington's The Devil's Bargain.--Natalie Marshall

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

In his new novel, Marlantes moves from the jungles of Vietnam to the spectral tundra of a very cold Cold War--era Finland. It's 1947. Arnie Koski, a U.S. Army colonel, has a delicate mission: As military attaché in Finland, a tributary state to Nazi Germany during the war but now a buffer against an increasingly inimical Soviet Union, he has to keep a bunch of constituencies happy, not least the Pentagon brass. Arnie's wartime friend, a Soviet officer named Mikhail Bobrov, is now his counterpart in Helsinki, with a different agenda but the same need for tightrope-walking skills. Their wives, Louise and Natalya, who form a careful friendship of their own, share that need, too. Louise is sometimes overwhelmed but no-nonsense, for "Army wives [are] used to getting things done alone." The soulful, cautious Natalya's life is more complicated still, for she lives under the doubtful eye of Oleg Sokolov, a colonel in the secret police, who monitors every step the Bobrovs take. For all that, Arnie and Mikhail hatch a friendly-wager plot to race by skis across northern Finland in February, perhaps not the smartest but certainly a suitably macho scheme. Alas--and here Marlantes' rather relaxed narrative picks up speed--Louise and Natalya take the contest up a notch, with Louise sketching out a press release: "Two war heroes, friends and allies, making money for a joint Soviet-American orphanage project." When, thanks to subterfuge, it actually lands in the hands of the press and the contest is widely publicized, governments get involved--and, naturally, things get ugly. Marlantes is better than Tom Clancy when it comes to the human element, but he's similarly fascinated by militaria ("a Shpagin could fire a thousand rounds a minute") and historical detail. All in all, it's not John le Carré or Alan Furst, but it serves. A few longueurs aside, there's enough cat and mouse here to keep Cold War thriller buffs engaged. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.