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The Russian Affair

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
An intriguing love and espionage story set in Moscow in the late 1970s, in the midst of the Cold War.
Twenty-nine-year-old Anna Viktorovna lives in Moscow with her young son and her father, a once popular and respected poet who has fallen into disgrace because of his dissident views. Her husband, a junior officer in the Red Army, is on active duty and living seven time zones away. Anna struggles gamely through her difficult existence, doing the best she can amidst the long lines, bureaucratic inferno, and corruption and incompetence of the police state. When she meets and makes an impression on a pow­erful Soviet official—Alexey Bulgyakov—her life begins to look a little brighter. Alexey is married and nearly twice her age, but he turns out to be a man of infinite patience and forbearance, and gradually a strange but solid bond grows between them. Though Anna still loves her mostly absent husband and harbors no illusions about the future, she and Alexey become lovers.
Soon Anna and Alexey’s burgeoning romance is irrevocably threatened when a KGB colonel forces Anna to spy on Alexey, who is suspected of disloyalty to the state. Though Anna loathes the notion of double-crossing the man she has come to love, when her family is threatened she must com­ply. But Anna isn’t the only character playing a double game.
With bravura storytelling, stunning authenticity, and com­plex yet sympathetic characterizations, The Russian Affair depicts a love that struggles to survive against all odds and despite its many-layered deceptions.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 14, 2011
      Wallner's beautifully crafted if sometimes slow-moving evocation of 1970s Russia focuses on the struggles of 27-year-old Anna Tsazukhina, a house painter who lives in a small Moscow apartment with her famous poet father, Viktor Tsazukhin; her frail son, Petya; and her army officer husband, Leonid, though he's often on active duty far away. As she attempts to find food for her family and medicine for her son, she dreams of acquiring better living quarters. Once Anna begins an affair with Alexey Bulyagkov, a high government official, her everyday live becomes easier, but—this being Soviet-era Russia—she must pay a price. A KGB colonel recruits her to spy on Alexey and report on their affair. Wallner (April in Paris) ratchets up the suspense as he slowly peels away the layers of deceit. Patient readers willing to forgo flat-out action will be rewarded.

    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2010

      German author Wallner, who scored an international hit a few years back with April in Paris (which LJ's own Bette-Lee Fox recommended for all fiction collections), moves on from the World War II era to Cold War Moscow. Her father a disgraced poet and her soldier husband assigned seven time zones away, Anna Viktorovna falls for Soviet bigwig Alexey Bulgyakov. Then she's asked to spy on him. Good for the literary thriller crowd; with a reading group guide.

      Copyright 2010 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2011
      A harrowing cat-and-mouse game of espionage begins when 29-year-old Moscow housepainter Anna Viktorovna attracts the attention of Deputy Minister for Research Planning Alexey Maximovich Bulgyakov. As their clandestine relationship develops, Annas friend, journalist Rosa Khleb, introduces her to KGB colonel A. I. Kamarovsky, who blackmails Anna into providing information about native Ukrainian Bulgyakov. Unable to refuse Kamarovsky, Anna benefits despite her torn loyalties: her chronically ill young son, Petya, receives specialized medical treatment, and her father, poet Viktor Ipalyevich Trazuklin, has his dissident reputation restored and his work published. But her husband, Leonid, a captain in the Red Army, ignores Kamarovsky and is posted to a frigid remote island eight time zones away from Moscow. German author Wallner (April in Paris, 2008) is as persuasive in writing about love as in detailing the chilly efficiency of a Soviet cold war operation in which Anna is no more than a pawn in an elaborate scheme that can turn deadly.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2011

      Searching for an escape from her state job painting walls and from the tedious food and service lines in Soviet Moscow, 29-year-old Anna shyly embarks on an affair with a high-ranking deputy minister. The excitement of trysts and black market luxuries turns dangerous when Anna is recruited by the KGB to spy on her lover. Anna and her family prosper because of her involvement with the KGB, but she feels increasingly uneasy about endangering the man she has grown to love. Anna must decide between her family's happiness and her own, as she begins to question her faith in a state that would demand such sacrifice. VERDICT Wallner's second novel (after April in Paris) has the detail and quiet emotion of a versatile romance combined with the pacing of an espionage thriller. His depiction of Cold War Moscow as both a nostalgic dream and a living nightmare will appeal to fans of modern historical fiction. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 11/1/10.]--Catherine Lantz, Morton Coll. Lib., Cicero, IL

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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