In post-Soviet Russia, a get-rich-quick scheme proves too good to be true—and deadly, to boot.
June 2, 1994. Businessman John Mills, sick of London, sick of banking, and homesick for Texas and his family, abruptly quits his job with an investment bank and buys a plane ticket to Dallas. But a chance airport encounter with slick Czech Petr Kovac turns his life upside down and takes him on a wild and sometimes scary escapade. Following a Czech model, the new Russian government has privatized industry and distributed vouchers of partial ownership to citizens. Buying up the Czech vouchers from clueless fellow countrymen has made Petr rich, and now he plans to do the same thing in Russia. Petr downplays the potential dangers: Their efforts make them business partners with Bratya (that is, Mafia), who manufacture counterfeit cigarettes, but no worries. Shrewd Russian beauty Anna Scherbatskaya proves a helpful guide and romantic partner for Petr. The rocky road to wealth untold takes the trio through hedonistic night spots, a forest bordello, and a series of oligarchs demanding their share. The most engaging aspect of this caper, which is based on a true story, is its depiction of this bizarre moment in recent Russian history. Haven, who describes post-Soviet Russia as “the Wild Wild West of the East,” makes his protagonist a keen and often wide-eyed observer and invites readers to make their own judgments. The tale slides smoothly from adventure to culture-clash drollery to tense crime yarn.
A colorful depiction of recent history wrapped in a comic caper. Think Donald Westlake with a Slavic accent.