From Kirkus Reviews:
Dinallo (Final Answers, 1992) doesn't stop once to catch his breath as his tale of modern Russia whisks readers from Moscow to Cuba and back to Moscow. Nikolai Katkov, an ex-alcoholic Moscow journalist, learns that an official named Vorontsov has been murdered and robbed of valuable medals. He submits a story on the crime to Pravda, only to see it rewritten by a staff member who deletes the most juicy detail--a hint that the murder may have been tied to international organized crime. The trail of Katkov's continued investigation leads to a local gangster who guides the journalist through the Moscow underworld. While poking around, Katkov barely avoids a hit man's bullets. A tough, sexy US Treasury agent named Gabriella Scotto becomes interested in his search when she reads his article; it turns out that she is working on the same case. After perusing some of Vorontsov's personal documents, Scotto and Katkov discover a connection between the dead man and Michael Rubineau (short for Rubinowitz), a Russian-American racketeer/embezzler who is shipping two billion missing dollars to a Baltimore warehouse, from which it will ultimately be sent to Rubineau's resort in Cuba. The pair follow the loot, and Katkov discovers that his close friend Yuri and the reporter who mangled his story are both in on the scheme. Scotto and Katkov confront Rubineau with his crimes; after a lengthy shootout, Katkov returns to Moscow to settle accounts with Yuri. Although Yuri reveals that he saved Katkov's life several times, their friendship ends. The chemistry between Scotto and Katkov--sexual but unconsummated--gradually proves memorable. Suspenseful, fast-paced throughout, a surprising entertainment and a riveting read. -- Copyright ©1994, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
From Publishers Weekly:
Nikolai Katkov is a freelance journalist in Moscow, short on work and money, an ex-political prisoner pushing 40 and probably an alcoholic to boot. The mysterious murder of an Interior Ministry bureaucrat promises him a big story: Was the victim about to blow a whistle? Was he involved in smuggling money out of Russia? Hunting down leads, dogged Niko is soon followed, threatened by local mafiya types, thrown in jail and shot at. He loses his story to an ambitious young reporter possibly allied to a devious Moscow Militia officer, only to be contacted by brassy Gabriella Scotto, a U.S. Treasury agent hot on the money-laundering trail of a Russian-born American billionaire, a case that ties in directly with Niko's lost story. The duo's quest for the truth takes Niko to Washington, Florida and Cuba before returning him to Moscow. Dinallo ( Final Answers ) neatly shows the turmoil and hand-to-mouth desperation of Moscow life (the near impossibility of obtaining coffee; Scientology classes offered at Moscow State Univ.), and his pacing is properly frenetic, but he can't seem to decide if Niko, who narrates, is Woody Allen or Bruce Willis. The surprise ending may look like waffling to some readers, but all will enjoy the breakneck roller-coaster ride getting there. Reader's Digest Condensed Book Club selection.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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