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Flames of Heaven
A Novel of the End of the Soviet Union

Rating
Format
Paperback, 416 pages
Published
United States, 1 July 1996

This item is no longer available.

Product Description
Product Details
EAN
9780671850906
ISBN
0671850903
Publisher
Age Range
Dimensions
17.8 x 11.1 centimeters (0.30 kg)

Reviews

Sasha Leskov is a good artist who paints mediocre Soviet military murals. Misha Samsonov is a good soldier who leads troops into losing battles, most recently in Afghanistan. In this novel of contemporary Soviet life, both discover that although their professional ideals are hopeless, they are blindsided by unexpected loves that redeem their despairing lives. Sasha's love for Sherin, the beautiful Uzbek, links their fates to political conflict from Latvia to Uzbekistan as her powerful father pits his brutal clan against the KGB forces of Sasha's brother. The intrigue and passions that overwhelm characters in this compelling novel are as timely as today's headlines. Peters, author of Red Army ( LJ 4/1/89) , Bravo Romeo (S. & S., 1990), and The War in 2020 ( LJ 3/15/91), is also an army intelligence analyst at the Pentagon. He demonstrates not only a talent for characterization but a formidable knowledge of the former USSR. Recommended for popular collections.-- Ann Donovan, St. Petersburg Junior Coll. Lib., Fla.

Recent history provides the backdrop for Peters's bleak novel about a crumbling empire inhabited by dreary people. Self-absorbed Latvian Sasha Lesknov makes his living painting murals glorifying the Soviet military. On assignment in Potsdam in 1989, Sasha befriends stoical army captain Mikhail ``Misha'' Samsonov, a highly decorated Afghan war veteran. Returning to Moscow to restore an unfit regiment to combat readiness, Misha meets and eventually marries Vera, Sasha's pretty but somewhat dull ex-girlfriend. Sasha begins an affair with exotically beautiful Shirin Talala, whose father is the notorious Uzbek mob chieftain Ali Talala. Sasha's brother Pavel, a loyal KGB functionary, is trying to bring Ali to justice. But that's the least of Ali's problems: his beloved right-hand man may betray him, and Islam fundamentalists are threatening his fiefdom. A violent coup is launched in Uzbekistan, and Misha and his now capable unit are dispatched to quell the unrest. The adventure and suspense that filled Peters's Red Army and The War in 2020 are absent here; unrelievedly downbeat, the story drags on like a Siberian winter. (Apr.)

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