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Vodka (Hardcover)

by Boris Starling (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 503 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd (1 Mar 2004)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0007119453
  • ISBN-13: 978-0007119455
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 15.6 x 5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 314,901 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review
Boris Starling's third thriller Vodka continues the run of excellence that started with Messiah. For the last decades of Soviet communism, there existed a weird symbiosis between officialdom and organised crime; Vodka offers an inventive description of what happened in the early years of democracy when that antagonistic partnership broke down. Alice Liddell could not be more of an innocent--her very name tells us that she is out of her depth, in Wonderland--and she gets lumbered with the job of privatising Moscow's largest vodka factory. Struggling with her alcoholism in a society where hard drinking is universal, Alice is caught up in the gang warfare between the distillery's Mafia boss Lev and his Chechen rivals. Meanwhile, someone is stealing children from an orphanage Lev protects and the KGB man who acts as his deputy is playing sinister games of his own. Vodka offers an intelligent and well-informed take on Russian politics—-all the more so, paradoxically, for changing some of the details and names of what happened in real life. The relationship between Lev and Alice is genuinely touching—he is the hard man who discovers there is somebody he cares about, the woman for whom falling in love is a destructive ravishment. --Roz Kaveney

Review
Praise for Messiah: 'A real cliffhanger' Sunday Express'Fast-paced, gritty... deserves nothing but praise' EsquirePraise for Storm: 'A furious, compelling and enjoyable read' Maxim'I've been pinned helplessly to every chilling page' Loaded

Post-Communist Russia is the setting for a thriller of political and criminal intrigue, in which control of the nation's favourite tipple demands unscrupulous actions. The unlikely heroine is Alice Liddle, an American alcoholic who has been brought in to privatise Moscow's largest distillery - but that brings her into conflict with the murky world of high-powered crime where the capital's three largest gangs are striving to set their own agenda as order breaks down. Throw in a serial killer and you have the ingredient for a tense and ingenious tale that shows Russia from its sordid inside. The characters are well-rounded and real, the dialogue crisp and earthy, while the storyline weaves a spell that has already become the hallmark of Starling in his previous blockbuster Messiah. This is a beefy book that satisfies the appetite of both crime and political aficionados. (Kirkus UK)

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What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

Vodka
58% buy the item featured on this page:
Vodka 3.5 out of 5 stars (25)
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Customer Reviews

25 Reviews
5 star:
 (10)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (7)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (25 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Vodka, Boris Starling, 22 Jan 2005
By RachelWalker "RachelW" (England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Vodka (Paperback)
Vodka is important in Russia. Very important. As a character puts it in one soliloquy: "It is our lifeblood; the defining symbol of Russian identity. It is our main entertainment, our main currency, our main scourge. Vodka effects every aspect of Russian life...it is the great equaliser. If there's one thing which unites the President with the frozen drunk found dead on a street, it is Vodka... What's Vodka if not all things to all men? Every aspect of the human condition finds its reflection in Vodka, and its exaggeration, too. Russians drink from grief and from joy, to be warmed in the cold, and cooled in the heat, because we are tired and to get tired."

So, as with the Spice on Herbert's Dune, he who controls vodka controls Russia. This is why, in the immediate days after the fall of communism - which has left the economy in ruins, the rouble worthless and vodka as the only currency (people are healed with it; people are tortured with it; people's salaries are paid in it; peopled are bribed with it) - the largest distillery in the country, Red October, is selected as the vehicle to lead the push for privatisation. The quick success of the venture, the selling of such a national symbol, is hoped to convince the Russian people that western capitalism is the only way forward. To organise the privatisation, American banker Alice Liddell is brought in. However, despite her experience the task will not be easy. The Russian people - who "enchant with their arts and inspire with their courage, but have horror, tragedy and drunkenness spiralling through their genes" - are sceptical and thus resistant, and rival mafiya gangs are busy vying for control of the city, leeching off the power vacuum. Lev, the charismatic leader of one of the gangs, currently owns Red October, and Alice - whose life, like that of Russia, is also torn between new and old, comfort and danger, sanity and madness - must first get past him. The great bear, after the fall of the old regime, is stumbling blind, dangerously, into its future, and chaos and uncertainty are the only norms. So, little attention is paid when the body of a child is pulled from the icy Moscow River. And a second. And then a third.

The plot of Vodka is very hard to pin down, because it is a multi-stranded, multi-plotted Janus of a book. In a way, the plot itself is Russia; it exemplifies Russia in myriad ways. Starling's examination of a country lost in its own wilderness is absolutely astounding. I have never been so struck by wonderful lines such as, "like vodka, the onion is another perfect symbol of Russia. Onions have many layers; and the more you peel away, the more you weep."

Alice, an outsider who finds herself adrift in a huge confusing land, is a perfect internal reflection of the country itself, and the book is crammed full of other instances of symbolism and metaphor far too clever to be written about in this small space. Set during 100 days in the winter of 1991 (and with one chapter per day, that makes it a meaty tome), it is a tumbleweed of violence, emotion, politics and transition blowing down an icy, deserted street. It is big and complex, panoramic and epic.

The narrative structure too is incredible: it expands and contracts like a Chinese finger-trap as the focus is placed on the political big picture, the distillery and the politick, and then successively switched onto the developing relationship between Alice and Lev (which is less convincing in actuality than it is as a progressive metaphor), and the bleak investigation by a determined Estonian policeman into the child murders. The structure breathes and propels you along with the waves of pace created by the shifts of that focus. A big book it may be, but overlong it is not, and fascinating it is to the final word.

Starling's vision is powerful and all-encompassing, and there are more than enough profound and striking ruminations on the nature of Russia (and vodka!) to fill a small notebook. One of my favourites is, "There is no such thing as Russian cuisine, only things that go well with vodka."!

The portrait of a country he clearly adores is a remarkable achievement. It is a country where the only system of law that works is the rule of the mafiya. The politicians are corrupt, and the gang-leaders are the only people of any honour - and it is an honour they stick to with pride. Lev, portrayed as he is almost to be the "hero" of the piece, is incensed when a rival Chechen gang breaks the code and involves innocent members of the public, and his retribution is swift and deadly. It is a world turned on its head, and it is entirely convincing. In all honesty, I am awed by Starling's immense achievement. I ache for more. Apparently, it's on its way.

The ending, too, is perfect. As the novel ends, with the same lines as it began, Starling seals tight this vast echo-chamber of a novel and sends resonances eddying through the body of it; the serpent eats its own tail; the monster consumes itself, and the book - and Russia - seems to come full circle. As a Russian official puts it: "every Russian crime is cannibalistic to some extent; no people feed on and off each other more than the Russians."

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars ., 6 May 2004
By RachelWalker "RachelW" (England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
Vodka is important in Russia. Very important. As a character puts it in one beautiful soliloquy: “It is our lifeblood; the defining symbol of Russian identity. It is our main entertainment, our main currency, our main scourge. Vodka effects every aspect of Russian life…it is the great equaliser. If there’s one things which unites the President with the frozen drunk found dead on a street, it is Vodka… What’s Vodka if not all things to all men? Every aspect of the human condition finds its reflection in Vodka, and its exaggeration, too. Russians drink from grief and from joy, to be warmed in the cold, and cooled in the heat, because we are tired and to get tired.”

So, as with the Spice on Herbert’s Dune, he who controls vodka controls Russia. This is why, in the immediate days after the fall of communism has left the economy in ruins, the rouble worthless and vodka as the only currency (people are healed with it; people are tortured with it; people’s salaries are paid in it; peopled are bribed with it) the largest distillery in the country, Red October, is selected as the vehicle to lead the push for privatisation. The quick success of the venture, the selling of such a national symbol, is hoped to convince the Russian people that western capitalism is the only way forward. To organise the privatisation, American banker Alice Liddell is brought in. However, despite her experience the task will not be easy. The Russian people – who “enchant with their arts and inspire with their courage, but have horror, tragedy and drunkenness spiralling through their genes” – are sceptical and thus resistant, and rival mafiya gangs are busy vying for control of the city, leeching off the power vacuum. Lev, the charismatic leader of one of the gangs, currently owns Red October, and Alice – whose life, like that of Russia, I notice is also torn between new and old, comfort and danger, sanity and madness – must first get past him. The great bear, after the fall of the old regime, is stumbling blind, dangerously, into its future, and chaos and uncertainty are the only norms. So, little attention is paid when the body of a child is pulled from the icy Moscow River. And a second. And then a third.

The plot of Vodka is very hard to pin down, because it is a multi-stranded, multi-plotted Janus of a book. In a way, the plot itself is Russia; it exemplifies Russia in all ways. Starling’s examination of a country lost in its own wilderness is absolutely astounding. I have never been so struck by wonderful lines such as, “like vodka, the onion is another perfect symbol of Russia. Onions have many layers; and the more you peel away, the more you weep.”

Alice, an outsider who finds herself adrift in a huge confusing land, is a perfect internal reflection of the country itself, and the book is crammed full of other instances of symbolism and metaphor far too clever to be written about in this small space. Set during 100 days in the winter of 1991 (and with one chapter per day, that makes it a meaty tome), it is a tumbleweed of violence, emotion, politics and transition blowing down an icy, deserted street. It is big and complex, panoramic and epic.

The narrative structure too is incredible: it expands and contracts like a Chinese finger-trap as the focus is placed on the political big picture, the distillery and the politick, and then successively switched onto the developing relationship between Alice and Lev (which is less convincing in actuality than it is as a progressive metaphor), and the bleak investigation by a determined Estonian policeman into the child murders. The structure breathes and propels you along with the waves of pace created by the shifts of that focus. A big book it may be, but overlong it is definitely not, and fascinating it is to the final word.

Starling’s vision is powerful and all-encompassing, and there are more than enough profound and striking ruminations on the nature of Russia (and vodka!) to fill a small notebook. One of my favourites is, “There is no such thing as Russian cuisine, only things that go well with vodka.”

The portrait of the country he clearly adores is a remarkable achievement. It is a country where the only system of law that works is the rule of the mafiya. The politicians are corrupt, and the gang-leaders are the only people of any honour – and it is an honour they stick to with pride. Lev, portrayed as he is almost to be the “hero” of the piece, is incensed when a rival Chechen gang breaks the code and involves innocent members of the public, and his retribution is swift and deadly. It is a world turned on its head, and it is entirely convincing. In all honesty, I am awed by Starling’s immense achievement. I ache for more.

The ending, too, is perfect. As the novel ends, with the same lines as it began, as Starling seals tight this vast echo-chamber of a novel and sends resonances eddying through the body of it, the serpent eats its own tail; the monster consumes itself and the book, and Russia, seems to come full circle. As it is put by one Moscow official, “every Russian crime is cannibalistic to some extent; no people feed on and off each other more than the Russians.”

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars I recommend abstinence, 18 Feb 2006
By Noel Ohora "noeloh" (Bristol, UK) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Vodka (Paperback)
Not worth writing a long review of such a disappointing mess of a book. Its massive length & sprawling plot are no doubt intended to reflect the size & complexity of Russia, but the author simply isn't good enough to bring this off, & the book lacks all coherence. The characters are flat & lifeless, & they spend a great deal of time explaining things to one another rather than conversing normally. In fact the reader is bombarded with information about Russia pretty well non-stop, but this doesn't mean that you actually learn anything. For the most part the writing consists of automatic phrasing, which is forgiveable in an airport book but not in one that has higher ambitions. Yet it also fails as a thriller because the pacing is all over the place & narrative tension hardly exists. I could go on but I won't. Enough.
Comment Comment (1) | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)


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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars ambitious - 2
Starling says in his preface that this book and it's subject was a 'labour of love', and that certainly comes accross.

So, where to start, the plot......... Read more
Published 6 months ago by An avid reader

3.0 out of 5 stars Too much going on
I have to agree with many of the reviewers, this book is too big and tries to cover too much of a subject. Read more
Published 13 months ago by White Rose

2.0 out of 5 stars A So-So Thriller
Back in the 1980s, Martin Cruz Smith wrote Gorky Park. The promotional material presented it as a sneak peak at life (and detective fiction) behind the Iron Curtain. Read more
Published 18 months ago by J. Bowen

5.0 out of 5 stars A truth all over the world
This book is in reality telling was what the west and its controlled associations are doing with all the third world countries and soviet related states from the late seventies... Read more
Published on 4 Jul 2007 by Diaa M. Fakhr

5.0 out of 5 stars Very interesting - a great historical novel come thriller
Maybe not everyone's cuppa but I really enjoyed Vodka. May help that I have been to Moscow and I enjoyed the historical context that provides the backdrop to this gripping work... Read more
Published on 22 Aug 2006 by gingergiraffe

1.0 out of 5 stars Vodka, quick review
I found the book very hard to get into because the start is unfocused and it feels as if the author didn't know how to begin the book. Read more
Published on 11 April 2006

4.0 out of 5 stars One Helluva Tale!
Boris Starling's sprawling narrative is set in Moscow over a period of only four and one half months, yet the novel is epic in nature. Read more
Published on 8 April 2006 by Jana L. Perskie

1.0 out of 5 stars Really, really poor
I cant decide whether to explain in lenghthy technical detail why this book is so awful, or to give you all the shortened version - so lets settle for the latter. Read more
Published on 19 Jan 2006 by P. Roberts

2.0 out of 5 stars dilluted
I really had high hopes for this book, sadly I was disappointed. I agree with the comments here that this would have been better as two books. Read more
Published on 14 Oct 2005 by Simon Franklin

3.0 out of 5 stars Map may be needed
I enjoyed Storm but wasn't that impressed by Messiah although I enjoyed the televisation. I think in this book the author tried to squeeze in way too much. Read more
Published on 21 Feb 2005 by normngrey

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