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RED SQUARE The Ultimate Soviet thriller EDWARD TOPOL & FRIDRIKH NEZANSKY Corgi Books 1984 "Fast moving and exciting... better than Gorky Park." GOOD BOOK GUIDE Translated from the Russian by Krasnaya Ploshchad 413 pages Goodread review : Kenneth rated it *****
it was amazing The setting is the Soviet Union in the early 1980s when Leonid Brezhnev was the top guy. The book is a combination of a police procedural with a panoramic view of how much of Soviet society and government worked (or didn't) back then - so much corruption. Igor Shamrayev is the main investigator of the death of Brezhnev's brother-in-law, Semyon Kuzmich Tsvigun, which was announced to the public as a suicide but which insiders know wasn't. The politics are fascinating - everybody has a reason to be paranoid. The KGB (secret police) and certain other government agencies, have ways to snoop on anybody of interest - planting hidden microphones and cameras almost anywhere. One of the co-authors - Neznansky - worked for quite a few years in one of them. The plot is fast moving with a number of twists. People get killed. But you leave with a definite impression of how a long time Communist society actually worked out, and why the USSR finally collapsed a decade later.
Much of this story is factually accurate - the names, the people and the places... the death of Brezhnev's brother-in-law was widely reported in the West.
'Death after long illness' said Pravda... although Andripov told Brezhnev it was suicide.
Just supose it was murder... "Meaty entertainment." SUNDAY TIMES "Gripping and informative fiction that has an unexpected and chilling end." YORKSHIRE POST "Much more fun than Gorky Park." THE SPECTATOR
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R 599
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THE HISTORY OF THE YORUBAS The Rev. Samuel Johnson 2001
Hardback, CSS Press, Lagos
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8
R 150
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THE SPICE ISLANDS VOYAGE
In Search of Wallace
TIM SEVERIN
Hardcover
First edition
Photographs by Joe Beynon and Paul Harris
Illustrations by Leonard Sheil
Published by Little, Brown & Co, London, 1997
The book is in excellent vintage condition.
Clean interior with no inscriptions.
There is a name and date written in it.
Tightly bound and feels unread.
Tim Severin's book about the East Indonesian Spice Islands is full of insights as it retraces a journey through places of fabulous natural and cultural diversity by the first person to articulate evolutionary theory, Alfred Russel Wallace. In restaging parts of Wallace's perilous explorations, recorded in his enthralling The Malay Archipelago (1869), Severin repeats the formula of previous books and duplicates the earlier traveller's difficult conditions. Wallace's book "reveals a truly extraordinary man" who inspired Severin to monitor later changes in the Spice Islands and efforts to preserve their unique habitats. He condenses Wallace's 60 or 70 journeys over eight years into one continuous route and a few months.
Any book about Wallace would be a fascinating one. He was "a learned maverick" willing to think the inconceivable, a man of ability and modesty, possessed with phenomenal curiosity. Severin deserves credit for bringing us to him in this moving biography which is itself a work of exploration and witness.
The story of Wallace's life is interspersed with accounts of Severin's visits, in a traditionally built boat, around the remote islands east of Borneo, such as Sulawesi and the tiny Banda and Kei islands. Although the intensive logging and rapid industrialisation which have wrecked other parts of Indonesia and caused its current environmental catastrophe have barely reached them, Severin finds plentiful evidence of man-made disaster.
The bad news is very bad, and fulfils Wallace's worst prophecies. He was unequivocally hostile to commercial greed and the way in which imperialism mostly enriched "large capitalists". When he returned to Victorian Britain, he concluded that its vast inequalities had produced "a state of social barbarism". Severin makes more hesitant criticisms on finding economic and political conditions comparable to those Wallace condemned.
But there is also good news: here Severin begins to match Wallace for inspiration and commitment, so that his project really comes alive. Among sketches of jungle life, Severin assumes Wallace's enthusiasms and approach. Funded by sales of rare specimens, Wallace returned home with two live birds of paradise. But he was less fortunate than Severin (funded by BP) in his pursuit of the rare Red Bird of Paradise. Severin's account of watching those birds in their "dancing trees" is intoxicating, as is his witness of the sea turtle's struggle to lay its hunted eggs and the crew's efforts to hide them.
Remoteness is the best protection. He discovers that the trade in nutmeg maintains the Bandas' independence, and that villages on the
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