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The Death of Achilles (Unabridged)
 
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The Death of Achilles (Unabridged) [Audio Download]

by Boris Akunin (Author), Paul Michael (Narrator)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Audio Download
  • Listening Length: 13 hours
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Books on Tape
  • Audible Release Date: 16 May 2006
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002SPXIWC
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
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Product Description

In 1882, after six years of foreign travel and adventure, renowned diplomat and detective Erast Fandorin returns to Moscow in the heart of Mother Russia. His Moscow homecoming is anything but peaceful. In the hotel where he and his loyal if impertinent manservant Masa are staying, Fandorin's old war-hero friend General Michel Sobolev ("Achilles" to the crowd) has been found dead, felled in his armchair by an apparent heart attack. But Fandorin suspects an unnatural cause. His suspicions lead him to the boudoir of the beautiful singer, "not exactly a courtesan", known as Wanda. Apparently, in Wanda's bed, the general secretly breathed his last.
©1998 Boris Akunin; (P)2006 Books on Tape

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful
By RachelWalker TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Erast Fandorin returns to Russia after six year's diplomatic service in Japan, and immediately finds himself thrown into a mystery that will see his skills of both mental dexterity and physical survival tested to the limit...

General Sobolev, popularly known as "The Russian Achilles", a national hero after much distinguished conduct during the Russo-Turkish war, is found dead in his hotel room. Fandorin hears of the circumstances of his old friend's death, and is unkeen to put the death down to simple natural causes. He tells his superiors his misgivings, and they give him permission to look into the matter himself. If something suspicious is indeed going on, it will be best for them to seem to have spotted it.

So, with the help of his new Japanese manservant Maso, who has a disturbing habit of trying to get his boss laid, Fandorin begins to investigate the most curious affair of his career so far.

Akunin's novels really are quite a treat. It's hard to know what level to appraise them on, really: they're terrific swashbuckling mystery/adventure stories; they're very funny satires, and they also swallow up sly literary and cultural references that demonstrate how Akunin is one of the most intelligently playful writers you could possibly pick up. Oh, and they're superbly entertaining, too.

Fandorin, of course, is most often cited as the best thing about these novels. (I don't particularly agree... I just love the playful tone that doesn't take itself very seriously; the jokes and references that Akunin slips in just to amuse himself, but which are rewarding when you manage to spot one of them. How many go by unnoticed, it's impossible to know.) He's certainly a great character, and has got readers coming back for more In their droves. Endlessly mysterious, honourable, witty, sharp as a pin, he's great company to spend a novel with. Akunin's greatest triumph with him is always leaving the reader wanting more: he has a tendency to shift the focus off Fandorin which means he remains a constant enigma; we never spend enough time with him to feel we completely know him; there's always the sense of a lot left hidden that we want to know about. Turkish Gambit was written largely from the perspective of a female character; Murder on the Leviathan was told from the point of view of four different characters; and halfway through this novel Akunin shifts from Fandorin to write from the perspective of the villain (who is possibly Akunin's best creation yet). It's particularly successful here, giving the book a completely new injection of fresh fiery life just at the moment it needs it.

This method of never quite giving the reader as much of Fandorin as they want means they'll keep coming back for more. Not only that, but it keeps Akunin's books and style fresh and interesting. They're really a hybrid of the standalone novel and the series novel: he has the advantage of a recurring protagonist as hook to keep readers coming back, but also the freedom to explore completely new characters and narrative structures.

And even when you've dispensed with all the unselfconscious cleverness, they're still great mysteries, exciting adventures, as Fandorin careens around Moscow getting himself into all kinds of scrapes. They're full of charming esoteric titbits, too.

The novels may be wildly improbable (then, they're supposed to be), but they're also wildly entertaining, very easy to read, and very, very charming. They have a multitude of qualities to recommend them, and if you haven't read one yet you are definitely missing out.

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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Erast Petrovich Fandorin must surely be crowned as the world's greatest detective. Only 26 and yet he has solved some of Russia's most difficult and violent cases, shown valour on the battlefields of Turkey, saved an ocean liner and developed ninja abilities in Japan. Now he is back to tread the mean streets of Moscow in this fourth book.

This is a real page turner. Akunin has forensically developed Fandorin's character over the last four books, and the translations by Andrew Bromfield are humourous and meticulous. The books are being published in an intriguing order, which means that we read about Fandorin's exploits without knowing some of his past history. For example we know he spent time in Japan, following Death on the Leviathan, but have yet to have seen any record of his exploits there.

Fandorin is beautifully crafted, that is one. The cases are difficult, twisted and carefully plotted, that is two. The atmosphere of pre-Soviet Russia, with its formality and rule book, is wonderfully constrictive, that is three.

Overall a brilliant detective novel, which is reinventing the genre and providing new twists and intrigue in a fully realised historically accurate world.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Delightful! 7 May 2006
By Didier TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
What a charming book! By coincidence this, the last in the series to appear (so far) was the first I read about the delightful Erast Petrovich Fandorin. Minutes after finishing I ordered the first three volumes, because I definitely want more of him.

There's nothing very special or high-brow about this book but so what? It's a superbly crafted old-fashioned detective story, indeed reminiscent of James Bond or other super-spies, but the Russian setting makes it all the more colourful and exotic.

A willing suspension of disbelief is necessary, but grant it and you'll be richly rewarded!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
now he is a martial arts expert
This is an improvement on past stories but the addition of martial arts to Erast Fandorin many skills does vear very close to the worst excesses of JT Edson. Read more
Published 22 months ago by A. Browne
Sherlock Holmes Meets James Bond
Imagine if Sherlock Holmes had trained as a ninja and Dr. Watson was a King Fu expert. The picture in your mind wouldn't be far off the heroes of this book, young Russian... Read more
Published on 19 Jun 2009 by Herman Gelmet
Another Akunin masterpiece
If you can get over the fact that the numbering of this series is all awry, you will discover a debonair and clear thinking detective on the lines of Christie's Poirot. Read more
Published on 3 April 2009 by Anthony R. Webber
The Assessor confronts the Assassin
Erast Fandorin's return to Moscow is marred by the death of his war-hero friend, The White General - Mikhail Sobolev. Read more
Published on 22 Aug 2008 by Stephen A. Haines
Head Over Heels
Erast Fandorin's detective stories are my idea of perfect escapism. All the books are set in the later half of the 19th century - mostly in Russia - and feature a young, stuttering... Read more
Published on 26 Jun 2008 by Oliver Redfern
Too many coincidences
A little disappointing. Several elements stretch belief to the limit - and coincidence is a too frequent contributor. Read more
Published on 7 Jan 2008 by A.K.Farrar
I don't think I was meant to be rooting for the Murderer.....
The Fandorin series is marked by being pretty inconsistent in style and this one is no exception. It's almost as if Boris Akunin is "trying out" different styles but for the... Read more
Published on 10 Oct 2007 by Elspeth Flashman
One of Akunin's best
It is undestandable why a Western reader would think that there was another mystery in the gap between Murder on the Leviathan and The Death of Achilles and that the translator has... Read more
Published on 26 Sep 2007 by SM
Enjoyable, but the final third is weak
The Fandorin series is being translated out of sequence. This was not such a problem for the reader where those two books were concerned, but (for me) it was a barrier to enjoying... Read more
Published on 14 Jun 2007 by quippe
Fine
This is a good read. It's not great and the Independent review is exaggerating to make a comparison with Flashman: the narrative has none of the energy nor the humour of Flashman. Read more
Published on 23 Dec 2006 by Travis
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