Madness Treads Lightly
By (Author) Polina Dashkova
Translated by Marian Schwartz
Amazon Publishing
Amazon Publishing
12th September 2017
26th September 2017
United States
General
Fiction
891.7
Paperback
464
Only three people can connect a present-day murderer to a serial killer who, fourteen years ago, terrorized a small Siberian town. And one of them is already dead. As a working mother, Lena Polyanskaya has her hands full. She's busy caring for her two-year-old daughter, editing a successful magazine, and supporting her husband, a high-ranking colonel in counterintelligence. She doesn't have time to play amateur detective. But when a close friend's suspicious death is labeled a suicide, she's determined to prove he wouldn't have taken his own life. As Lena digs in to her investigation, all clues point to murder-and its connection to a string of grisly cold-case homicides that stretches back to the Soviet era. When another person in her circle falls victim, Lena fears she and her family may be next. She's determined to do whatever it takes to protect them. But will learning the truth unmask a killer...or put her and her family in even more danger
The sweeping plot, sinister as the Siberian taiga, does rely overly on coincidence, but such contrivance is more than outweighed by captivating storytelling, distinctive characters, and the eternal conundrum of Russia itself. Publishers Weekly (starred review) The scenery isstunning and interesting when someone mentions Siberia, I generally think of snow and frozen tundras, but Dashkovas descriptions of a deeply forested and frozen land are magical and lend a certain level of grandeur to an otherwise ordinary thriller... this is a fine novel if youre interested in Russia and the changes that took place in the 80s and 90s when the country transitioned from communism to capitalism as well as wonderful descriptions of the land from a native.Fresh Meat (starred review)
Dubbed the "Russian crime queen," Polina Dashkova is Russia's most successful author of crime novels. She's sold fifty million copies of her books and has thrilled readers in countries across Europe and Asia. A graduate of Moscow's Maxim Gorky Literary Institute, she has been active as a radio and press journalist and has worked as an interpreter and translator of English literature. Her books have been translated into German, Chinese, Dutch, French, Polish, Spanish, and English.