Reggie Nadelson's
Londongrad: An
Artie Cohen Mystery has been included in
Publishers Weekly's list
of the
Best Books of 2009.
See list.
If I had to choose between betraying my country and betraying my friend, I
hope I should have the guts to betray my country.”—E. M. Forster
Through
seven previous novels, Reggie Nadelson has created one of the more memorable
characters in detective fiction: Artie Cohen, New York police detective and
first-generation American with complex ties to his Russian past, especially his
close friendship with the enigmatic and flamboyant New York/London club owner Tolya
Sverdloff. Now, in Londongrad—by far Nadelson’s most ambitious novel to
date—Artie is faced with a murder that strikes at him personally and will ultimately
place his best friend’s life in his hands as it challenges his own loyalty.
In a playground in Brooklyn, Artie is led to a dead girl tied up in duct tape on
a children’s swing. He soon realizes the killer murdered the wrong girl—the intended
victim was Valentina Sverdloff, Tolya’s daughter, long adored by Artie. Artie flies
to London to tell Tolya and finds himself enmeshed on his friend’s behalf in a
maelstrom of Russian money and crime. Like Berlin at the end of World War II ,
somebody tells Artie, Londongrad, as it’s known, has become an offshore island for
the new Russian underworld. Over his head, Artie is drawn further in, to Moscow,
where, balancing between the old KGB and the new FSB, between the dazzle and
grimness of Russia today, he uncovers a painful truth about his past that puts
Tolya’s life in the balance.
Praise for Reggie Nadelson:
“The amazing Nadelson…can’t write a character who doesn't charge off the
page.” —Washington Post on Disturbed Earth