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The Darkening Field by William Ryan

The Darkening Field

A Novel

by William Ryan

  • Critics' Consensus (1):
  • Published:
  • Jan 2012, 352 pages
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Page 2 of 4
There are currently 26 member reviews
for The Darkening Field
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  • Jeanne W. (COLUMBIA, MD)
    Promising new series
    I really enjoyed this book by William Ryan. It's a basic murder mystery, but set in pre-WWII Soviet Union and that makes all the difference. A Moscow detective gets sent to Odessa to investigate a murder on the set of a Soviet propaganda movie. Because the dead girl's lover is a highly placed Soviet officer he must tread carefully. The depictions of Odessa are evocative and the characters live in an atmosphere of paranoia and that make me very glad to live in the USA. The pace is a little slow, but I think that's the lack of technology so it just takes a little getting used to. This is the second in what looks to be a series. I look forward to reading more by this author.
  • Judith W. (Brooklyn, NY)
    Good Russian Cop
    I enjoyed this book and liked the main character. A good solid police procedural in an unusual setting in a time period and place I am unfamiliar with, and about which I would now like to learn more. Will definitely be reading the author's first novel and look forward to the next.
  • Les G. (Fort Collins, CO)
    Great mystery
    The Darkening Field by William Ryan is a wonderful murder mystery set in 1937 Soviet Russia. When Captain Alexi Korolev of Moscow's Criminal Investigation Division is sent to Odessa to investigate the murder of a young actress, he uncovers a plot much more twisted than he could have imagined. This is a first-rate mystery that perfectly captures the overriding fog of terror in Stalin's Russia, where even an innocent mistake or mishap is enough to doom you, your coworkers, and your entire family.

    Thanks to Book Browse's First Impressions for a chance to read this advance readers' edition.
  • Judith P. (rosebud, missouri)
    Character study of a place and time.
    The USSR in the 1930's is the main character of this story of murder and political intrigue. Trying to solve a crime and keep the different entities from putting the detective in prison or the gulag. Very insightful into the suffering of the people in the name of a political system.
  • Jennifer F. (Saratoga, CA)
    Intriguing
    The Darkening Field gave me an insight into the transitioning period of Soviet culture through a well-written mystery with believable characters. I enjoy books that take an unusual view of a historical period. I recommend this book to others who like a suspenseful read with some historical perspective.
  • Jane C. (Brighton, MI)
    Russian Mystery
    I enjoyed the book, quick read. Character development was well done. Not a book that I would have picked up at the store, but am glad that I had the opportunity to read about historical Russia. Solving the murder takes very interesting turns through rural Russia, with the help of a Moscow detective.
  • Kenneth T. (Houston, TX)
    Almost Very Good
    William Ryan has chosen as his milieu a most difficult period, the Soviet Union during the 1930s. What we know in hindsight of this period raises the bar considerably for the novelist, the "willing suspension of disbelief." He almost pulls it off with a clever plot, the death of a young woman, a Party member who is a "close" friend of a high ranking commissar. The mood is dark and the chill soon enters the readers bones as the Captain Alexi Korolev tired and worried about his role in the investigation navigates the treachery of the warring sides, the counter-revolutionaries, the Thieves, and his bosses. His character is sympathetic, but he is the only one even minimally fleshed out. The dialogue often sounds like a poor translation to depression-era American idiom. This is a shame because the blurring of good guys and bad, heroes and terrorists, winners and losers could have been terrific, just not quite there.

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