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Book Review: Liberation Movements

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  • Book Review: Liberation Movements

    BOOK REVIEW: LIBERATION MOVEMENTS
    Ronnie H. Terpening

    Library Journal Reviews
    School Library Journal Reviews
    May 15, 2006

    Steinhauer, Olen Liberation Movements Minotaur: St. Martin's Aug.
    2006. c.304p. ISBN 0-312-33204-1 [ISBN 978-0-312-33204-4 ]. $24.95. M

    This fourth entry in Steinhauer's (The Bridge of Sighs ) Eastern Bloc
    crime series deposits us in the late summer of 1968, as "the flowers
    of Prague's spring" are being crushed by the Warsaw Pact's invading
    tanks. In a nearby unnamed country, Brano Sev of the Ministry of
    State Security, the protagonist of 36 Yalta Boulevard , is now a
    colonel in his late fifties. He and his officers, Capt. Gavra Noukas
    and homicide inspector Katja Drdova, all have secrets to hide and a
    major crime to solve. Armenian hijackers have blown up an airplane
    en route to Istanbul, aboard which was a fellow officer of Armenian
    origin. Was the Ministry involved in the plane's destruction? Is
    there a connection to a crime committed seven years earlier? To find
    the answers, Gavra and Katja must confront their own demons. Using
    alternating time lines, reverse chronology, and disrupted sequence,
    Steinhauer again displays his masterful manipulation of character,
    plot, and reader expectations. Tightly entwined story lines, compact
    scenes that evoke a grim world while capturing character subtleties,
    and a style pared to the essential make this a fast, intriguing read.

    Highly recommended. [See Prepub Mystery, LJ 4/1/06.]- Ronnie H.

    Terpening, Univ. of Arizona, Tucson

    Publishers Weekly Reviews May 15, 2006

    Liberation Movements

    Liberation Movements Olen Steinhauer. St. Martin's Minotaur, $24.95
    (304p) ISBN 0-312-33204-1

    Steinhauer's dazzling fourth book in his series about various police
    and intelligence agents in an unnamed Communist-era Eastern European
    country gives a large role to Brano Sev, the seriously conflicted
    spy who starred in the previous entry, 36 Yalta Boulevard (2005). Sev
    sums up the new book's theme when he says to a younger subordinate,
    "Intelligence work is precisely what it says-it's about intelligence.

    We are not murderers." There's some irony here: we know that Sev has
    killed several people himself. But there's also an unexpected note of
    humanity, as Sev supervises the investigation by two junior agents
    of a murder in Russian-occupied Prague in 1968 that's later tied to
    a plane hijacked by Armenian terrorists on its way to Istanbul in 1975.

    Another new element is the Turkish capital, alive and yeasty compared
    to the drab, restricted home city of 36 Yalta Boulevard . And the
    emergence of a major female character-a homicide investigator looking
    for personal justice-shows how a skilled writer working at the top
    of his form can keep a series from faltering.
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