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Red to Black (Anna Rensikov, 1) Kindle Edition
“Red to Black has more in common with the elegantly paced books of John le Carré than it does with Ian Fleming’s James Bond novels. But readers who appreciate a healthy dose of real-world worries in their spy novels won’t complain.”
—Richmond Times-Dispatch
Gorky Park for the Putin era, Red To Black by Alex Dryden could have been ripped from recent headlines. At once a spy thriller, a love story, and a chilling look at a dangerously resurgent superpower, it is a masterful work that Stephen Fry calls, “Brilliant and unforgettable….Nothing short of miraculous.” Welcome to the New Russia.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarperCollins e-books
- Publication dateAugust 1, 2009
- File size2.9 MB
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Review
From the Back Cover
Finn is a veteran MI6 operative stationed in Moscow. In the guise of an amiable trade secretary, he has penetrated deep into the dangerous labyrinth that is Russia under Vladimir Putin to discover some of its darkest secrets, thanks to a high-level source deep within the Kremlin.
The youngest female colonel in the KGB, Anna is the ambitious daughter of one of the former Soviet Union's elite espionage families. Charged with helping to make Russia strong again under Putin, she is ordered to spy on Finn and discover the identity of his mole.
At the dawn of the new millennium, these adver-saries find themselves brought together by an unex-pected love that becomes the only truth they can trust. When Finn uncovers a shocking and ingenious plan—hatched in the depths of the Cold War—to control the European continent and shift the balance of world power, he and Anna are thrust into a deadly plot in which friend and foe wear the same face. With time running out, they will race across Europe and risk every-thing—career, reputation, and even their own lives—to expose the terrifying truth.
About the Author
Alex Dryden is a writer and journalist with many years of experience in security matters. When the Berlin Wall came down in 1989, Dryden watched the statues of Lenin fall across the former Soviet Union.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Red to Black
By Alex DrydenEcco
Copyright © 2009 Alex DrydenAll right reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-06-180386-4
Chapter One
I don't know who I'm writing this for but perhaps it's for you. If that makes it sound like a confession, you may wonder what I'm expecting in return. A small part of me, I admit, seeks forgiveness, or at least understanding. But that part of me is less important than the forgiveness I wish to give myself, and which I find elusive.I am writing to draw a line under the past, with its rot creeping into the present. I know now that if I had done this a long time ago, the present would never have been postponed and things would be different today.
In one of his more fatalistic moments, Finn said to me: 'Anna, you know our story can never be written.'
'Why not?' I asked him.
'Nobody would believe it,' he said.
But I'm here now, sitting in a medieval vault in a house in Tegernsee on the southern borders of Germany, reading Finn's story - our story - and I'm aware that all I have between me and the hostile forces that swim up at me from the pages is the Contender handgun and the twelve rifle shells on the table by my hand. And now that I've found these notebooks of his, or books of record, as he calls them, buried in this vault along with all the other material of our secret profession, I see his fatalism was short-lived. As I sift through the piles of notebooks, oddments, scraps and sheets of paper, documents and microfiches - their edges stained with cellar dampness - with only the heat of an oil burner to keep me warm, I can see that he has practically written our story himself.
The notebooks certainly contain the facts and, without these facts, my feelings would be drifting in a vacuum, unmoored to the reality that at any moment I may need to use this gun and all my years of training to kill my way out of here. Feelings need to be clothed in reality and the facts - this story - supply the clothes. For days now, I have been reading and rereading Finn's prose, notes and observations - over and over. I'm reading them sitting in this dark stone vault and my eyes are running from the fumes of the oil burner and I strain in the dim light to follow the thread of a story that began long before I met Finn.
According to one note Finn made, our story begins in 1998, when Boris Yeltsin's Russia reached its nadir. A later scrawl in Finn's undisciplined handwriting names 1989 as the beginning, the year the Berlin Wall came down at last. But another, perhaps more thoughtful, observation says that it all started in 1961, when we Russians erected the Wall in the first place.
Whatever the true beginning, however, everything Finn and I have experienced will continue to unfold into a dark and uncertain future, with or without us.
As I read all his disparate and complementary records, the thing that strikes me most deeply about what Finn experienced in his long quest to have the truth accepted in his own country is his sheer obstinacy, the relentless autopilot of individual human endeavour when success seems impossible.
What also strikes me is that Finn's past has dictated his life, much as my past has dictated mine.
'You cannot escape your past, Anna,' he once told me. 'But you don't have to live in it. You don't have to build the present in its image.'
If only Finn had been true to his own belief.
Finn could have had a quiet life. That is the point, I realise, as I sit here shivering in the damp cold. He told me that he chose to pursue this quest, not just for the truth, but to have the truth accepted by his masters in London, and their political masters in the British Government. But did he really choose? Or was it his deep-seated need for acceptance that fed his stubbornness and single-mindedness?
For my part, I know I'm looking for someone or something to find responsible for my own actions, but I can't escape my part.
Oh yes, Finn could have had a quiet life, a beautiful life. He had a great talent for doing nothing, which he called happiness, but he chose to go alone down the Tunnel, as he calls it here, and I hope I'm not deluding myself when I say he would not regret that now, whatever's happened to him. For Finn has disappeared and, as I wait for the crash of sledgehammers against the door upstairs, I'm looking for a clue to tell me something, anything that might help me to find him.
There is much, too, about Finn himself in these notebooks which distracts me from my increasingly urgent task. There are details of his internal struggle to understand his motives, a struggle which I never fully understood, and that he never told me, despite the fusion of our love. During all the time I've known Finn, he never wanted to bring his own past like an evil spirit into our house. So he wrote it down in the notebooks and buried it with our secret story in this vault, which has hidden many things and many people in its long history.
And there is much in the notebooks about his feelings towards me.
'There are three distinct spirits in our relationship,' Finn once said to my grandmother at the dacha in Barvikha. This was back in the freezing winter weeks leading up to the millennium, when perhaps he and I were at our closest, and when trouble seemed far away. 'There's Anna, me and the spirit that joins us.' My grandmother, with her peasant background, was comfortable with the world of spirits. She laughed with mirth and hugged him. Like many people whose lives he touched, Nana loved Finn.
Finn had just given me a charm bracelet. It contained two charms: a rabbit for me and a monkey for him. It was his nickname for me, Rabbit.
'The silver circle that links the charms,' he said, 'is the spirit that joins us.'
'I'm not sure I believe in spirits,' I said.
'I find I can't do without them,' he said breezily.
'How sentimental,' I replied.
But it was typical of Finn instinctively to sense the language, the context, of whoever he was talking to. Nana appreciated his inclusion of spirits. Nana was very superstitious and, my mother told me, she was also psychic. With her deep grey eyes that glinted over her sharp, hooked nose, she even looked witch-like. When Finn described his relationship with me in this way, she replied as if foreseeing the future.
'If only that were true,' she said. 'If only you, Anna and the spirit that joins you both really were the only three things in your relationship. God bless you.'
At this moment, in the cellar, I pause over another scrap of paper he wrote about us, on some Luxembourg hotel notepad. I'm mesmerised by what he's written and can almost feel his presence here, through the words.
'When we make love, and we look into each other's eyes, I see the child in you, Anna, the spirit in you, and in those moments you are me and I am you.'
It is these brief, aching glimpses of our intimacy that distract me from my task and, to keep my mind away from such thoughts and focused on the present danger, I sit and listen for the slightest sound. Then I slot the gun's firing pin into the mechanism and slide a single round of green spot ammunition into the chamber. With this weapon, I can kill a man at over two hundred yards.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from Red to Blackby Alex Dryden Copyright © 2009 by Alex Dryden . Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
From AudioFile
Product details
- ASIN : B002JXB8CK
- Publisher : HarperCollins e-books; Reissue edition (August 1, 2009)
- Publication date : August 1, 2009
- Language : English
- File size : 2.9 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 485 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #400,283 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #1,153 in Assassination Thrillers (Kindle Store)
- #1,167 in Political Thrillers & Suspense
- #2,259 in Espionage Thrillers (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the story engaging and well-written. They appreciate the intelligent writing style and believable historical details. The characters are well-developed. However, opinions differ on the pacing - some find it fast-paced and full-bodied, while others feel it's slow at times and hard to get through in the beginning.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book engaging with an interesting story and characters. They describe it as an enjoyable read with a current plot that keeps their interest until the end. Readers appreciate the steady pace and thought-provoking content.
"Excellent read. Good modern day political and espionage thriller...." Read more
"This is a spy story. It begins in 1999 and walks us through some of the background of Putin's rise to power and how he's consolidated it...." Read more
"This was an interesting first novel with complicated characters and a plot that bordered on the opaque...." Read more
"Amazing and convoluted account of the rise of Putin. The involvement of many countries, their banks, their governments...." Read more
Customers find the writing style engaging and intelligent. They describe the narrative as imaginative and believable, with realistic dialogue and action. The story is told in first-person from the perspective of a female Russian agent, and it holds their interest throughout. Readers appreciate the thought-provoking plot and the author's skill at storytelling.
"...Good modern day political and espionage thriller. Intelligently written with an a accurate political backdrop and a great historical view of Russia..." Read more
"...There are no James Bond shenanigans. Just a well-thought out story that lays bare what might be behind the world's financial dealings...." Read more
"...The writer will mature and improve and I look forward to seeing where he is headed with both the main concept and the main characters...." Read more
"...But it is well-written and, I believe, will hold the reader's interest as it sets out a quite believable image of the "new" Russia under..." Read more
Customers find the book's history interesting and believable. It explains Russian and German history in a way they hadn't heard before. They enjoy the story of current Russia and find the book informative with lots of facts and an accurate political backdrop. The book provides an interesting concept that makes one think about some of the issues.
"...Intelligently written with an a accurate political backdrop and a great historical view of Russia in the late days of communism into the new century" Read more
"...Still, there were many interesting concepts presented and the novel moved along at a reasonable pace...." Read more
"Amazing and convoluted account of the rise of Putin. The involvement of many countries, their banks, their governments...." Read more
"...the end, because it's very well written and because it explains Russian and German history in a way I had not heard before...." Read more
Customers like the character development. They say many characters are well-developed.
"...In saying that however, the characters were well drawn, the narrative is told in the first person from a female Russian agent's point of view...." Read more
"An exciting and interesting read. Many characters are well developed a nicely passed read. A contemporary story,that is very believable" Read more
"...He develops his characters well. Dialog and action are believable." Read more
Customers have different views on the pacing of the book. Some find it fast-paced and engaging, while others feel it's slow and plodding at times, especially in the beginning. The time jumps around unnecessarily for some readers, making the story seem flat and boring.
"...it any stars for the story itself, though, which is curiously flat and boring...." Read more
"...there were many interesting concepts presented and the novel moved along at a reasonable pace...." Read more
"...There are many characters, the time keeps jumping around in a way that was not clear to me, and the financial details so thick that I got lost/..." Read more
"It was a fast paced, full bodied story, the kept me turning the pages...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2014Excellent read. Good modern day political and espionage thriller. Intelligently written with an a accurate political backdrop and a great historical view of Russia in the late days of communism into the new century
- Reviewed in the United States on October 28, 2013This is a spy story. It begins in 1999 and walks us through some of the background of Putin's rise to power and how he's consolidated it.
The heroine, Anna, is a colonel in Russia's foreign intelligence. The hero, Finn, is an M16 operative. They meet and begin an affair with Anna's superiors' approval. She's supposed to dig into what Finn's after.
Finn's own superiors have lost confidence in him. Eventually, they forbid him to continue chasing down information about The Plan. No matter that men have died trying to expose it.
The two fall in love, with Finn telling her one day she'll have to choose between him and Russia. What he doesn't know is that he'll have to choose between his job and finding out the truth about The Plan.
There are no James Bond shenanigans. Just a well-thought out story that lays bare what might be behind the world's financial dealings. Dealings orchestrated by the Russians in a devious master plan with a scope that's frightening. I would say the KGB is behind it. But that no longer exists. At least not by that name...
If you like Le Carre, you'll enjoy this steady-paced low-key thriller. I did.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 18, 2014This was an interesting first novel with complicated characters and a plot that bordered on the opaque. Still, there were many interesting concepts presented and the novel moved along at a reasonable pace. The writer will mature and improve and I look forward to seeing where he is headed with both the main concept and the main characters. I found the ending somewhat immature but that can be overlooked in an initial effort. I look forward to Mr. Dryden's next book to see how he develops his world.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2013Amazing and convoluted account of the rise of Putin. The involvement of many countries, their banks, their governments. The brilliant relationship between the spies Anna and Finn. Their ability to anticipate and understand each other politically and personally. Fascinating book from all aspects. A "cannot put down book".
- Reviewed in the United States on December 2, 2012As I can see, a lot of readers had their doubts about this novel. The problem is the marketing of this book. This is a spy novel, in the manner of John le Carre, and certainly not a mindless thriller ala Tom Clancy. Alex Dryden has some very strong opinions about Vladimir Putin and today Russia. Of course, he is absolutely entitled to them, but even if he is extremely critical towards the complacency of the Western Europe, the story is, as usual, much more complex. I am not a fan or Mr.Putin, but he is not any worse then, for example, Tony Blair, the epitome of tragic lack of stature and principle that defines today's politican. This is a powerful, thick novel of shadows and masks. A challenge I enjoyed. In the end I have a quibble with Mr. Dryden. Calling late Mr. Yeltsin a hope for democracy is mind boggling. His cruel, corrupt regime, that pillaged the Russian people of everything that generations worked for, was the reason that Putin come to power.Now, it might be too late fot tears.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 1, 2018Good story. Kept my interest, all along wondering what the spies would eventually do with the information. Being a spy takes a lot of nerve, no matter what side you are on.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 9, 2015This is the first in a two-part series (so far) relating the story of a British spy, Finn, and a Russian spy, Anna. Set against the backdrop of Putin's rise to power, this book tells, in retrospect, the beginnings of their relationship, the oversight of their superiors and the conflicting interests of their countries. It loses its immediacy due to the author's choice of relating the story as a recollection rather than in actual time. But it is well-written and, I believe, will hold the reader's interest as it sets out a quite believable image of the "new" Russia under Putin. However, the main reason to read this book is to get the background that will enhance your enjoyment of the second book, "Moscow Sting" which is extraordinary.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2014I'm giving this three stars, even though I finally gave up and flipped to the end, because it's very well written and because it explains Russian and German history in a way I had not heard before. Putin's recent invasion of The Ukraine now makes perfect sense.
I didn't give it any stars for the story itself, though, which is curiously flat and boring. We never 'see' any action, it's always something the main character is either told about after the fact, or reads about after the fact, or narrates after the fact. I felt nothing for anyone.
Top reviews from other countries
- Charles J. MorrisReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 22, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Go to the bookstore at once!
This was a very expensive book to buy! Why? Because it was so brilliant that I immediately bought the three additional listed novels of Mr Drydens work. Move over John le Carré. Even people who do not normally read spy mysteries should read this brilliant book. It is a remarkable precis of Glasnost from Andropov through to Putin. Without doubt this book has had a great impact on my thinking and hopes for a democratic republic of Mother Russia. It is not much use Googling Mr Dryden, he seems to be very shy. Maybe because of his previous labours before lifting the pen. Incidentally his three follow up books are equally excellent and could be used in schools as both history and geography books.
- Roman ClodiaReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 16, 2009
4.0 out of 5 stars Air of authenticity
Set close to the present (2007), this is an excellent intellectual and political thriller focusing on `the Plan' devised in Soviet Russia in WW2 and carried out despite the fall of the communist states and the emergence of a `new' Russia.
Using the plot device of Finn, an MI6 spy, and Anna, less convincing as a KGB colonel, who fall impossibly in love, this is not high on explosive action, but is far quieter as they follow the trails of financial transactions across Europe, and strive to uncover the sinister reason behind the billions of dirty money flowing out of Russia.
As other reviewers have said, the story maintains a veneer of plausibility, precisely, I think, because it avoids too much impossible action of the James Bond/Jason Bourne type. However it dropped a star from me because the pulling together of the `team', a mixture of misfits from across Europe reminded me of other genre clichés; and also because the various narrative devices sometimes became a little clunky. So, for example, Anna sitting in the present alternates between a present tense narrative, a past tense narrative, and then occasionally an almost third person narrative where she attributes feelings and thoughts to people that she couldn't possibly know.
But this is a small quibble: the central character of Finn is both refreshingly intriguing and engaging, and a far cry from the usual thriller hero: not innocent or naïve but an almost determined ethical standard in the midst of a world of corruption, he lifted the book.
Not completely flawless (how come the KGB couldn't follow Anna and Finn if they were living in his flat in Camden for 4 years? How come she has to be smuggled out of Russia but then is never troubled by the KGB again when she's not exactly invsisible?) hence the dropping of one star, but still an excellent read with a disturbing air of authenticity about it.
- RosieReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 15, 2012
4.0 out of 5 stars Red to Black by Alex Dryden
This is a great spy novel portraying the current situation in Russia and how that affects Eastern and Western Europe. Sometimes the story became a bit convoluted, but for all that, a definite page-turner, I read it in a couple of days while on holiday. I wanted to read it after I'd read Snowdrops - another Alex Dryden novel.
- Sheila M CaseyReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 21, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars I learnt more about Putin's Russia from this novel than from anything else
An excellent thriller and love story with a great deal of fascinating information about the rise of the new Russia. An excellent mix of fact and fiction.
- CHReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 6, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant
Brilliant spy story