Wolves Eat Dogs
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Average customer review:Product Description
Chernobyl: the Zone of Exclusion. A ghostly place, deserted and forgotten for almost two decades; now inhabited by militia, shady scavengers, a few reckless scientists, and some elderly Ukrainian peasants ...This is the eerie and dangerous world Inspector Arkady Renko must navigate if he is to find out the truth behind the death of one of Russia's richest oligarchs. Pasha Ivanov has been found dead on the pavement outside his luxury high-rise apartment in Moscow. It seems like a straightforward suicide, but Renko, never one to take evidence at face value, refuses to drop the case, and there is something puzzling him: a mountain of salt found in Ivanov's wardrobe ...Determined to look deeper into the circumstances of Ivanov's demise, he acquaints himself with this wealthy businessman's powerful and corrupt circle, until his investigations lead him to Chernobyl's notorious Zone of Exclusion, where the body of Lev Timofeyev, Ivanov's former research partner, has been discovered in a contaminated cemetery ...Masterfully crafted and told with extraordinary insight and imaginative breadth, the bestselling author of "Gorky Park" brings us Renko's most beguiling and unusual adventure to date.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #41508 in Books
- Published on: 2005-10-07
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 336 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
The latest of Smith's thrillers about honest Russian cop Arkady Renko, Wolves Eat Dogs has a memorably spooky opening as Renko prowls the apartment of one of the men who has done well out of privatization and neo-capitalism and has suddenly jumped out of a tenth floor window. The dead man's cupboard is full of salt and he was clutching a salt-shaker when he died--no-one wants to investigate madness, but Renko suspects that there is more to it than that. When the dead man's partner turns up with his throat cut in a cemetery in the Ukraine, his bosses get him out of their hair by sending him to investigate--in the overgrown deserted towns and returning woodlands around the radioactive ruins of the Chernobyl power plant. A place full of deadly legacies and ruined hopes is just the sort of place where Renko feels at home, and where secrets are as common as giant mutant catfish. The mystery is less impressive here than the atmosphere--Smith gives the attentive reader more clues than merely playing fair demands--but with atmosphere so intense that hardly matters. --Roz Kaveney
Publishing News
A brilliant return for Arkady Renko - start reading and forget about everything else till you reach the end
The Times on Saturday
‘this is a chilling tale of Chernobyl 20 years on'
Customer Reviews
Arkady Renko's Journey to Chernobyl's Heart of Darkness
I have read and enjoyed Smith's previous Renko novels. Renko's erratic career path as a police inspector has seen him survive, barely, the apparatchiks of the Soviet regime (Gorky Park). He has survived its imminent demise (Polar Star) and the emergence of bloody cowboy capitalism (Red Square). Now, in Wolves Eat Dogs, Renko must operate in a Russia dominated by an elite group of billionaire oligarchs.
The primary setting of Wolves Eats Dogs is the 30-kilometer evacuation (or exclusion) zone in the northern Ukraine, just south of Ukraine's border with Belarus, surrounding the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. On April 26th, 1986 the number 4 reactor at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant exploded after a planned test shutdown went seriously wrong. The subsequent release of radioactive material (including massive amounts of cesium and strontium) is estimated to have reached levels exceeding 40 times the amount of radioactivity released by the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The short and long term effects of this explosion, particularly on the Republics of Belarus and Ukraine has been devastating. For example, the phrase "Chernobyl Necklace" refers to the ubiquitous ear-to-ear scar worn by Byelorussians and Ukrainians that have had thyroid cancer surgery. The thyroid cancer rate is estimated to be up to 2000 times greater in Belarus than in the general world population. Smith's eye for details makes note of these scars. The Chernobyl disaster has special resonance for me as I have spent five years involved with a Children of Chernobyl program that brings children from Belarus to the United States for six week health and respite visits. The dark world that Martin Cruz Smith portrays in Wolves Eat Dogs tracks remarkably well with accounts I have heard from Byelorussians and Ukrainians about life after Chernobyl. Smith made numerous trips to the exclusion zone and his investment in time and first-hand research bears fruit. It is into that dark world that fate and police work brings Inspector Arkday Renko.
A billionaire oligarch, Pasha Ivanov, is found dead outside his high-rise Moscow flat. All evidence leads to the conclusion that Ivanov has taken his own life by jumping from his penthouse apartment. Renko is not so sure and decides to conduct his investigation despite the clear displeasure this evinces up and down the police ladder and amongst the surviving owners of Ivanov's company. In this, Renko's stubborn, principled independence has not changed at all since he first came to view in Gorky Park. When a second related death occurs in the 30-kilometer exclusion zone surrounding Chernobyl, Renko's superiors are pleased to pack him off to investigate the death in the Ukraine. The majority of the action takes place in the exclusion zone. Renko plods on despite himself and despite attempts by virtually everyone to leave things alone.
It is impossible to say more about without revealing too much of the plot. However, it seems to be that in Wolves Eat Dogs we have seen Martin Cruz Smith at his finest. Smith does not devote any time to fleshing out the personal side of Renko. However, the similarity between the inner-life of Renko and the stark, despairing, world of the exclusion zone is unmistakable. It is at once a moving and tragic reflection of the life lived by Arkady Renko. Smith's portrayal of Renko, life in the exclusion zone, and his development of the plot from start to finish is first rate. This is a book worth reading.
a welcome return to form
Arkady Renko returns for his fifth outing and, thank the lord, it's a better effort than Havana Bay. Personally I didn't think Renko worked as a character outside Russia, his anti-hero status just didn't add up in Cuba.
This however is class. Renko tracks the murderer of a wealthy 'new russian' businessman from Moscow's plush apartments to the radioactive villages of Chernobyl. The usual outstanding narrative from Martin Cruz Smith, plenty of dark humour and an interesting examination of the 'new russian' phenomenom. Can't recommend this book highly enough.
Welcome back Renko.
Good on Chernobyl but Weak as a Thriller
After enjoying the two middle books in the Arkady Renko series (Gorky Park, Polar Star, Havana Bay, and Red Square) I picked up this fifth one with pretty high hopes. The story begins in roughly contemporary times with Renko still hanging on as Senior Investigator in Moscow. When a Russian bazillionaire industrialist takes a swan dive off the 10th-floor balcony of his locked ultrasecure apartment, Renko is called in to rubber stamp the apparent suicide. When the tycoon's friends and business associates all confirm the man's recent depression, and the security cameras show no intruders. However, Renko wants to know what caused the depression, and more interestingly, why one of the apartment closets is full of salt. True to form, Renko stubbornly pursues these lines of inquiry to the frustration and anger of his superiors and the chief of security for the bazillionaire's company. Soon thereafter, the bazillionaire's longtime friend and partner turns up dead in the 30-kilometer "zone of exclusion " which surrounds the Chernobyl nuclear accident site in northern Ukraine.
This provides Renko's superiors with a perfect excuse to exile him from Moscow for a while and punish him by stationing him in the highly radioactive environs of Chernobyl. This is where the book really works -- as a travelogue of Chernobyl some 15-20 years after the accident. Cruz Smith took several trips to the area to learn about the "black villages" and the lives of those who live in the contaminated area. This comes alive in his portrayal of the corrupt militia, the massive chop shop selling radioactive car parts, the underfunded researchers who risk radiation to try and understand the effects of the accident, the poachers who kill radioactive wild boar to sell to Moscow's 5-star restaurants, the old people who snuck back into their evacuated villages to live out their years, and more. He also tells of the chain of incredibly foolish mistakes that led to the disaster, as well as the inept Soviet response to it (including building a town for evacuees on a radioactive site). Eventually, of course, the story of the dead bazillionaire dovetails with Chernobyl, but frankly, it can't compete dramatically with the tragic story of the people in the zone which Cruz Smith tells so well.
As a thriller or crime novel, this installment never really works. The story is too cloudy, the characters too disparate and undeveloped, and the ultimate "answer" comes long after the reader has ceased to care. Renko doesn't evolve at all, he's the same stubborn, fatalistic cop who takes a lickin' and keeps on tickin'. Of course, as in the other books, he does manage to find a woman to share his life with. There's also a running subplot involving a mute Moscow orphan who has somehow entered Renko's life. His numerous appearances never seem to add up to anything other than a possible set-up for a future book. On the whole, fascinating stuff about Chernobyl, but that's about it.




