- This is not an enjoyable book to read at all. You’re immersed in the ugly history of the Soviet Union since the October Revolution in 1917 until 1938, just prior to the beginning of the Second World War.
- Post Lenin the Union was led by two murderous, abusive bullies, Josef Stalin and Lavrentiy Beria. They were merciless in their enforcement of Communist Party rule, and murdered hundreds of thousands of citizens in the process. Their egos were huge and their self-entitlement knew no bounds.
- The central focus of Knox’s novel is on Beria and his years as the Governor of Georgia. He’s a vicious liar, manipulator and rapist, and has no respect for his staff or colleagues apart from his childhood friend and ‘brother’ Vasil Murtov, who is his driver and assistant.
- I found it difficult to fathom Knox’s fundamental intent in this novel. Is it just a fictionalised history of a rotten autocracy, or does it have a deeper meaning? It can’t be claimed that it offers any insight into today’s Russia under Putin because the two states are vastly different. There is a contrasting narrative though. Murtov is married to Babilina and has two young daughters Ana and Melo. Their love for each other is real, and in the oppressive and brutal society they must survive in, inspiring. They are courageous and define what it actually means to be human.
- Another aspect of the tale that enlivens it dramatically is Knox’s comic touch. The dialogue is frequently crude and funny, often blokey in an Aussie way.
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