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Archangel by Robert Harris
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Archangel

by Robert Harris

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900114,634 (3.39)1
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Jove (2000), Paperback, 415 pages

Member:orientalist
Collections:Your libraryRating:
Tags:Russia, fiction,
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A dark and dense semi-historical fiction about Russia and Stalin. A fantastic adventure but Russia is a depressing place, then and now! I enjoyed Harris’ writing style and the way he developed the main characters. I "knew" them immediately; having been to Belarus helped. Definitely not your typical American thriller writer, Harris. ( )
  ORFisHome | Jul 13, 2009 |
This is a reasonably interesting thriller set in Boris Yeltsin's Russia. I probably would have liked it a bit more had I read it when it was first released. ( )
  wanack | Apr 14, 2009 |
another dan brown clone. this book was interesting to me becuase of the setting. who in the world knows where archangel is let alone that at one time it was the largest naval base in the world. for archangel alone it was worth reading the book. i do wonder when the movie will come out? ( )
  benitastrnad | Jul 21, 2008 |
A well crafted political suspense novel, very belivable, excellent.
  skulli99 | Jul 7, 2008 |
The book centres on Professor "Fluke" Kelso, a British history professor based out of New York, a "specialist in all things Stalin". Trying to resurrect a struggling career, Kelso meets an old man who claims he was present the night in 1953 when Stalin died. The old man leads Kelso to Stalin's secret notebook but is then brutally murdered in his apartment. The notebook leads Kelso, the old man's daughter, and an American reporter O'Brien, to a forest in the northern city of Archangel where secrets from the Soviet past are hidden. The present-day Russian government sends special forces commandos with orders to make sure that the secrets in Archangel stay hidden but the past breaks free in one bloody battle and sets events in motion which ensures that history has a good chance of repeating itself... ( )
1 vote obsessedwithbooks | Apr 17, 2008 |
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Archangel (Robert Harris novel)

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0091779243, Hardcover)

Archangel is a remarkably literate novel--and simultaneously a gripping thriller--that explores the lingering presence of Stalin amidst the corruption of modern-day Russia. Robert Harris (whose previous works include Enigma and Fatherland) elevates his tale by choosing a narrator with an outsider's perspective but an insider's knowledge of Soviet history: Fluke Kelso, a middle-aged scholar of Soviet Communism with a special interest in the dark secrets of Joseph Stalin. For years, rumors have circulated about a notebook that the aging dictator kept in his final years. In a chance encounter in Moscow, Kelso meets Papu Rapava, a former NKVD guard who claims that he was at Stalin's deathbed and says that he assisted Politburo member Beria in hiding the black oilskin notebook just as Stalin was passing. Before Kelso can get more details, Rapava disappears, but the scholar is energized by the evidence Rapava has provided. As Kelso begins to pursue his historical prize, however, his investigation ensnares him in a living web of Stalinist terror and murder. It soon becomes clear that the notebook is the key to a doorway hiding many secrets, old and new.

Harris's understanding of Soviet and modern Russian is impressive. The novel rests on a seamless blend of fact and fiction that places real figures from Soviet history alongside Kelso and his fictional colleagues. Especially disturbing are the transcripts from interrogations and the excerpt from Kelso's lectures on Stalin; the documents provide chilling evidence to support Kelso's claim: "There can now be no doubt that it is Stalin rather than Hitler who is the most alarming figure of the twentieth century." --Patrick O'Kelley

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:24 -0400)

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