Kirkus Reviews QR Code
UNTRACEABLE by Sergei Lebedev Kirkus Star

UNTRACEABLE

by Sergei Lebedev

Pub Date: Feb. 2nd, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-939931-90-0
Publisher: New Vessel Press

An aging chemist who defected to the West after the collapse of the Soviet Union is targeted by Russian assassins armed with a lethal dose of the "untraceable and imperceptible" poison he developed.

Kalitin, the 70-year-old chemist, created the neurotoxin, called Neophyte, in a secret facility on a distant Russian island. A spiritually empty "fan of death," he is now dying of cancer himself in the former German Democratic Republic. After Vyrin, a second Russian defector, is fatally poisoned, Russian generals suspecting that Kalitin is working with German police in an investigation of the killing send Shershnev, a war-damaged special forces operative, to rub him out before suspicion "falls on our country." A third player in this barbed narrative, which cycles back to Russia's collaborations with Germany on lab experiments in the 1930s, is Travniček, a compromised church pastor who prays for "the people with dead hearts." Though the novel was inspired in part by the fatal poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal in England in 2018, those looking for a page-turning spy novel should probably look elsewhere. Lebedev, a modernist whose corrosive vision was introduced to U.S. readers in Oblivion (2016) and The Year of the Comet (2017), is less interested in plot than probing the wasted inner lives of his characters, the surreal aspects of their existence, and the horrors that science casually inflicts on people, animals, and the environment. Though Putin is never mentioned, his malevolent presence is felt throughout.

A darkly absorbing intellectual thriller by one of Russia's boldest young novelists.