Showing posts with label Martin Cruz Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Martin Cruz Smith. Show all posts

Saturday, November 4, 2017

Havana Bay

Martin Cruz Smith is a first timer for me and I did not realise that he had written Gorky Park which was made into a movie a few years ago. Arcady Renko is a humourless Russian investigator sent to Havana to investigate the death of another little known Russian spy in a water accident. The book begins very slowly and takes even more slowness to get into the characters of the plot. There are few police people and a Cuban female investigator Ofelia all of whom don't want to investigate the Russian's death. There is a liberal sprinkling of the mistrust between Cuba and Russia in the book a kind of Cuban hate of Russia for leaving them in a lurch and sort of leaving them as holding the last communist post in the world. The plot gets bogged down repeatedly in the Cuban Russian interplay of emotions which is not dispelled despite a few more murders taking place. Smith has done a good job in slowly unfolding the plot to its conclusion in the Havana Bay but I thought the ending was a bit too abrupt. He should have allowed the emotions between Arcady and Ofelia to be taken to a logical conclusion. This was supposedly Arcady's fourth book in the series, it would be interesting to read his earlier works on Arcady and also his later works. Goodreads 4/5

Sunday, August 10, 2014

Tokyo station by Martin Cruz Smith

Another brilliant book by Martin Cruz Smith, this one "Tokyo station" set in 1941 at the beginning of the greatest war known to mankind. Harry Niles, son of missionary parents is brought up in the Tokyo underworld and he is more Japanese than American. He is seen as a spy by the Japanese and not trusted by the Americans also. In between there is a colonel who is after his blood for betrayal during the chinese war in Nanking in 1937 and his mistress Michiko who is torn between loyalty to him and the nation. Puts in brilliant perspective the Pearl Harbour strike and the beginning of the war for Japan. Intrigue, betrayal, suspense are the hallmark of this brilliant narrative by Smith. Highly recommended.

It is also known as December 6 in some editions. 

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Havana Bay

Martin Cruz Smith is a first timer for me and I did not realise that he had written Gorky Park which was made into a movie a few years ago. Arcady Renko is a humourless Russian investigator sent to Havana to investigate the death of another little known Russian spy in a water accident. The book begins very slowly and takes even more slowness to get into the characters of the plot. There are few police people and a Cuban female investigator Ofelia all of whom don't want to investigate the Russian's death. There is a liberal sprinkling of the mistrust between Cuba and Russia in the book a kind of Cuban hate of Russia for leaving them in a lurch and sort of leaving them as holding the last communist post in the world. The plot gets bogged down repeatedly in the Cuban Russian interplay of emotions which is not dispelled despite a few more murders taking place. Smith has done a good job in slowly unfolding the plot to its conclusion in the Havana Bay but I thought the ending was a bit too abrupt. He should have allowed the emotions between Arcady and Ofelia to be taken to a logical conclusion. This was supposedly Arcady's fourth book in the series, it would be interesting to read his earlier works on Arcady and also his later works. 

Zodiac

  American true crime mystery movie “Zodiac” (2007) directed by David Fincher and starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Mark Ruffalo, Robert Downey Jr. ...