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A True Story of Espionage, Betrayal and Murder
December 15, 2008
On November 1, 2006, Alexander Litvinenko, a Russian émigré and former intelligence officer vocal in his criticism of Vladimir Putin, was poisoned at the Millennium Hotel in London. Pulitzer® Prize-nominated journalist Cowell covered the story while working as London bureau chief of the New York Times. His step-by-step approach here leads to a certain amount of repetition, detracting from what might otherwise have been a more powerful dramatic presentation. Narrator Simon Vance (www.simonvance.comLJ 11/15/08) adeptly pronounces the Russian names and places. Recommended for public libraries. [Also available from Random House Audio (NA CDs. retail ed. abridged. NA hrs. ISBN Gloria Maxwell, Metropolitan Community Coll.-Penn Valley Lib., Kansas City, MO
Copyright 2008 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
June 2, 2008
The 2006 poisoning of the former KGB agent turned dissident Alexander Litvinenko by radioactive polonium captured the world’s imagination. In this less than crystalline account, New York Times
London bureau chief Cowell plays up the spy-thriller intrigue. Building Litvinenko almost into a miniseries protagonist—he was “usband, father, traitor, whistleblower, son, spy, lover, fugitive”—Cowell recaps his career as a KGB functionary and then critic of Russia’s postcommunist kleptocracy; his relationship with tycoon Boris Berezovsky; his exile in London’s murky Russian expat community and outspoken attacks on Russian President Vladimir Putin, whom he denounced, from his deathbed, as his killer. Cowell’s analysis of the crime and the investigation, especially his retracing of the tell-tale trail of polonium, is repetitive and often confusing. He characterizes the murder sometimes as a brazen act of “nuclear terrorism” intended to restart the Cold War, sometimes as a careful, surreptitious hit. The question of whodunit—Putin? Berezovsky? vengeful KGB veterans? Russian businessmen exposed by Litvinenko’s private sleuthing? to protect the Italian prime minister, Romano Prodi, of all people?—flounders inconclusively among competing conspiracy theories. Cowell relishes the mystery of the case, but doesn’t dispel it.
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