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Wolves Eat Dogs [Anglais] [Relié]

Martin Cruz Smith
5.0 étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (1 commentaire client)

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"Why would anyone jump out a window with a saltshaker?" A good question, especially when the suicide victim is Pasha Ivanov, a Moscow physicist-turned-billionaire businessman--a "New Russian" poster boy, if ever there was one--with several homes, a leggy 20-year-old girlfriend ("the kind [of blonde] who could summon the attention of a breeze"), and every reason to be contented in his middle age. So, wonders Senior Investigator Arkady Renko, in Martin Cruz Smith's Wolves Eat Dogs, what provoked Ivanov to take a header from his stylish 10th-floor apartment? And how does it relate to the shaker clutched in his dead hand or the hillock of table salt found on his closet floor?

Renko, introduced in Smith's 1981 bestseller, Gorky Park, is a cop well out of sync with rapidly changing Russian society, "a difficult investigator, a holdover from the Soviet era, a man on the skids" whose determination to do more than go through the motions of criminal inquiries inevitably exasperates his superiors. Thus, when this saturnine detective declines to accept the verdict that Ivanov did himself in--who peppered that salt around the capitalist's premises, Renko still wants to know, and what about rumors of a security breach at Ivanov's apartment building?--he is exiled to the Ukrainian Zone of Exclusion, the "radioactive wasteland" surrounding Chernobyl, site of a notorious 1986 nuclear disaster and the place where, only a week after Ivanov's demise, his company's senior vice-president is found with his throat slit. There, among cynical scientists, entrepreneurial scavengers, and predators both two- and four-legged--an exclusive coterie of the rejected--Renko chews over the crimes on his plate. Unfortunately, the dosimeter that warns him of radiation exposure at Chernobyl does not also protect him from a pair of malevolent brothers, or a "damaged" woman doctor offering him mutually assured disappointment.

Smith has a keen eye for the comical quirks of modern-day Russia--its chaotic roadways, voracious appetite for post-communist luxuries, and evolving ethics ("Russians used to kill for women or power, real reasons. Now they kill for money"). And this story's bleakly beautiful Ukrainian backdrop nicely complements the desperate hope of Renko's task. Still, the greatest strength of Wolves Eat Dogs (Smith's fifth series installment, after Havana Bay) is its characters, especially Arkady Renko, who despite his lugubrious nature continues to show a heart as expansive and unfathomable as the Siberia steppe. --J. Kingston Pierce --Ce texte fait référence à une édition épuisée ou non disponible de ce titre.

From Publishers Weekly

Smith's melancholy, indefatigable Senior Investigator Arkady Renko has been exiled to some bitter venues in the past—including blistering-hot Cuba in Havana Bay and the icy Bering sea in Polar Star—but surely the strangest (and most fascinating) is his latest, the eerie, radioactive landscape of post-meltdown Chernobyl. Renko is called in to investigate the 10-story, plunge-to-the-pavement death of Pasha Ivanov, fabulously wealthy president of Moscow's NoviRus corporation, whose death is declared a suicide by Renko's boss, Prosecutor Zurin. Renko, being Renko, isn't sure it's suicide and wonders about little details like the bloody handprints on the windowsill and the curious matter of the closet filled with 50 kilos of salt. And why is NoviRus's senior vice-president Lev Timofeyev's nose bleeding? Renko asks too many questions, so an annoyed Zurin sends him off to Chernobyl to investigate when Timofeyev turns up in the cemetery in a small Ukrainian town with his throat slit and his face chewed on by wolves. The cemetery lies within the dangerously radioactive 30-kilometer circle called the Zone of Exclusion, populated by a contingent of scientists, a detachment of soldiers and those—the elderly, the crooks, the demented—who have sneaked back to live in abandoned houses and apartments. The secret of Ivanov and Timofeyev's deaths lies somewhere in the Zone, and the dogged Renko, surrounded by wolves both animal and human, refuses to leave until he unravels the mystery. It's the Zone itself and the story of Chernobyl that supplies the riveting backbone of this novel. Renko races around the countryside on his Uralmoto motorcycle, listening always to the ominous ticking of his dosimeter as it counts the dangerous levels of radioactivity present in the food, the soil, the air and the people themselves as they lie, cheat, love, steal, kill and die.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --Ce texte fait référence à une édition épuisée ou non disponible de ce titre.

Détails sur le produit

  • Relié: 208 pages
  • Editeur : Macmillan (4 mars 2005)
  • Langue : Anglais
  • ISBN-10: 0333907507
  • ISBN-13: 978-0333907504
  • Moyenne des commentaires client : 5.0 étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (1 commentaire client)
  • Classement des meilleures ventes d'Amazon: 431.662 en Livres anglais et étrangers (Voir les 100 premiers en Livres anglais et étrangers)
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Martin Cruz Smith
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Format:Broché
Moscow in 2003. The most voracious crime bosses and businessmen have killed each other, the truce between the different mafia groups appears to hold, when business tycoon Pavel ("Pasha")Ivanov falls to his death from his impregnable 10th-floor luxury apartment in Moscow, only 15 minutes after having been dropped off by his security detail. Suicide? Homicide? The initial response of the Russian judiciary is suicide, therefore no need to investigate, do an autopsy and esp. prevent panic among foreign investors.
This book marks the fifth appearance of (Senior) Investigator Arkady Renko in a novel by MCS. In his famous first appearance in "Gorky Park", he proved a stubborn detective during Soviet times. Now he has to watch his steps even more: in New Russia some 50.000 former KGB personnel have become entrepreneurs who maintain excellent contacts with key members of government. A fugitive American wheeler dealer who served as Pasha's assistant secures a respite for Renko in order to do more than a token investigation, but only for a few days... Renko has to move fast.
The action soon moves to the closed zone around Chernobyl, venue of a nuclear reactor's melt down, where nobody is supposed to live, let alone engage in business.
A second investigation in the book concerns the traumatised Zhenya, who refuses to speak, except when reading aloud his favourite fairy tale. Renko has been asked by the director of a home for abandoned children to try and find out Zhenya's identity, who his father is. Renko takes him to Gorky Park regularly, where the boy beats him repeatedly and resoundingly with chess, then performs his ritual visits to the different attractions, as if to say, this is where I once went with Dad, hoping perhaps to meet him again during one of the visits.
This is a very rich book with superlative characterisation, great atmosphere, dialogue and pace. Unlike many crime writers, MCS has done his own research and thanks every collaborator. An addictive and highly recommended account of the perils of crime investigation in New Russia.
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