Product Details
Child 44

Child 44
By Tom Rob Smith

List Price: £12.99
Price: £6.93 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £15. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

32 new or used available from £5.85

Average customer review:

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #229 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-03-03
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 480 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

About the Author ~ Tom Rob Smith
Tom Rob Smith was born in l979 to a Swedish mother and an English father and was brought up in London where he still lives. He graduated from Cambridge in 2001 and spent a year in Italy on a creative writing scholarship. Tom has worked as a screenwriter for the past five years, including a six-month stint in Phnom Penh storylining Cambodia's first ever soap. .

Exclusive Amazon.co.uk Interview with Tom Rob Smith

What is Child 44 about?

Child 44 is a thriller set in the terror of 1950s Stalinist Russia, a brutal regime that executed anyone who disagreed with its dogma. It proclaimed to be a perfect society. So, when a series of brutal murders take place, no one is permitted to say that these are the work of a serial killer. In a perfect society there can be no crime.

One man, Leo Demidov, a State security agent, a man who has spent his entire career arresting innocent men and women, decides to redeem himself by catching this killer. To do so, he must buck the system, risking his life and the life of everyone he loves.

What inspired you to write it?

It was inspired by a true story, a killer called Andrei Chikatilo who murdered over sixty children, girls, boys, over a period of ten years. Reading about the case I realized this wasn’t a criminal mastermind who’d evaded capture through devious skill. He’d gone on killing for so long because the system refused to admit he even existed. He should’ve been caught on numerous occasions but the prejudices of the State got in the way and, as a result, tragically, many children died. I felt such a tremendous sense of frustration reading about the events that I saw its potential as a piece of fiction.

The real killer murdered in the 1980s. In Child 44 I moved the story back to the 1950s, when the stakes were much higher for someone who dared to risk opposing the State.

Who are your literary influences?

In one sense, any book that I’ve ever read, good or bad.

To answer the question more usefully authors who have directly influenced Child 44 are Graham Greene, Robert Louis Stephenson, Thomas Harris and Arthur Conan-Doyle. Child 44 is as much an adventure as it is a detective story.

If you could recommend just one "must-read book" to anyone, what would it be and why?

There are so many wonderful books. However, connecting to Child 44, I’d say The Gulag Archipelago by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. Whenever I’ve mentioned the book to people who haven’t read it, they understandably presume it to be melancholy. Much of it is brutal but he is also brilliantly witty, slicing up the absurdities of the regime. It’s an incredible book – or, rather, three books, but there is an abridged edition published by Harvill.

What top tips do you have for anyone looking to write their first book?

There’s a lot of advice already out there. One issue is being able to recognize which advice is good and which is bad, advice that works for one person, might prove disastrous for someone else.

Amazon.co.uk
With so many new books in the crime and thriller field vying for our attention, alert readers need all the help they can get. In the case of Tom Rob Smith's Child 44, the numerous glowing reviews were preceded by a lively word of mouth on the book. The latter can often be misleading, but not in this case -- this is a very exciting debut. It is set in the Soviet Union and in the year 1953; Stalin's reign of terror is at its height, and those who stand up against the might of the state vanish into the labour camps – or vanish altogether. With this background, it is an audacious move on Tom Rob Smith’s part to put his hero right at the heart of this hideous regime, as an officer in no less than the brutal Ministry State Security.

Leo Demidov is, basically, an instrument of the state -- by no means a villain, but one who tries to look not too closely into the repressive work he does. His superiors remind him that there is no crime in Soviet Union, and he is somehow able to maintain its fiction in his mind even as he tracks down and punishes the miscreants. The body of a young boy is found on railway tracks in Moscow, and Demidov is quickly informed that there is nothing to the case. He quickly realises that something unpleasant is being covered over here, but is forced to obey his orders. However, things begin to quickly unravel, and this ex-hero of state suddenly finds himself in disgrace, exiled with his wife Raisa to a town in the Ural Mountains. And things will get worse for him -- not only the murder of another child, but even the life and safety of his wife.

Tom Rob Smith’s beleaguered hero is a protagonist who we know will (at some point) have to rebel against the totalitarian state he works for. But it is the suspense of waiting for this moment as much as the exigencies of the thriller plot that makes this such a compelling novel. --Barry Forshaw

Lee Child
"An amazing debut - rich, different, fully-formed, mature ... and thrilling."


Customer Reviews

Compelling, although not a typical page-turner5
Might seem a bit contradictory, but this is not at all a page-turner in the normal sense of rapid movement and action - the detail is far too deep, dark and dense for that. And indeed that is exactly what keeps you turning the pages - the dour, opressive, stifling atmosphere of Stalin's Russia. It seeps into every corner of the main character's, Leo's, life, and that of his parents and wife Raisa. It tinges every single decision they make - what job he takes so that his parents get a decent apartment, and indeed it becomes part of Raisa's attraction to him. One of fear and becoming part of the system rather than left outside it. These are the most compelling parts of the book - Raisa's taut relationship with her husband, and indeed whether he turns her in at one point to save his own neck (and that of his parents). Through this we see how Stalin's system permeated every facet of people's lives then.

The investigation rides alongside this, but takes second stage at points. I agree too that the ending came across as somewhat contrived - especially given how well all else was thought out. I would have knocked one star off for that - but the rest is so well done that I decided to stick with 5.

Thrilling Debut5
The crime plot itself may be perfuctory and less than compelling, but it is Tom Rob Smith's sense of time and place that marks this out as a thrilling debut. Stalinist Russia has never been as terrifyingly evoked in popular fiction - the constant dread and debilitating double-think cosumes the characters's souls, and the author paints this horrific society as the landscape of some surrealist horror story.

Long-listed for this year's Booker Prize, this far outshines the usual pretencious, onanistic dross that makes up the contenders for literary awards. Dark, evocative and ultimately deeply moving this is writing of the highest order, and I for one can't wait for Smith's next novel.

The Trouble with Longlisting4
I notice that since the announcement of its inclusion on the Booker Longlist, Child 44 has been subject to the usual scrutiny: perhaps if it had not been so mentioned, then it would have swam under the radar of the types who take the Booker Longlist as their yearly reading guide, devouring each novel, no matter how dull. I read Child 44 3-4 months ago (not long after it was first published), and was blown away by it. Too much value is placed on books that are "thoughtful" rather than entertaining; abstract rather than compelling. By no means am I making claims that Child 44 is "literary," but why does that automatically have to equal: airport read...rubbish...pulp trash? Enjoyable is a dirty word (the same snobbery is abound for Harry Potter). Was not Dickens dismissed as trivial, audience-pleasing tosh, at first?

I would implore people to read this novel. Enjoy it, become swept away by the breathless pace and virtuoso narrative, and ignore the Bookerites who wouldn't want to see their list tarnished with a crime novel (or even a book that is, dare we think it, enjoyable!).