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The reflection upon my situation and that of this army produces many an uneasy hour when all around me are wrapped in slepp.
Few people know the predica´ment we are in.
General George Washington, January 14,1776
Find more books about the year1776 and the American Revolution.

Title: Special Assignments: The Further Adventures of Erast Fandorin
Author: Boris Akunin
ISBN: 0297848224
EAN: 9780297848226
336 Pages
Publisher: Nicolson
Binding: Hardcover
Publication date: 2007-01-11
Author: Boris Akunin
ISBN: 0297848224
EAN: 9780297848226
336 Pages
Publisher: Nicolson
Binding: Hardcover
Publication date: 2007-01-11
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'a double treat for fans.'
'Intricate, incredible, pleasurable.' (Jessica Mann LITERARY REVIEW )
'Fandorin is a delightful creation - a quirky gentleman sleuth who cuts an impeccably groomed dash through the courts and political intrigues of 19th century Russia...With an eccentric cast of supporting characters and a fleeting romance, Akunin's whodunit formula is irresistible.' (EASY LIVING (February) )
'a double treat for fans.' (Omer Ali TIME OUT (10-17 January) )
'Akunin brilliantly ratchets up the tension...and Fandorin's unveiling of the clues will keep you enthralled.' (Richard Mead FQ (January/February) )
'an excellent read.' (Laura Wilson GUARDIAN (13.1.07) )
'This...demonstrates Akunin's underlying seriousness of purpose in writing the Fandorin novels, whose clever devices and mischievous tricks disguise a determination to strip bare the extremes of human behaviour.' (Joan Smith SUNDAY TIMES (14.1.07) )
'The perfect Sunday afternoon read.' (Kath Murphy SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY (21.1.07) )
'ingenious and craftily plotted exploits.' (GOOD BOOK GUIDE (February) )
'this elegantly written book is fast-moving, witty and compulsively readable...The story packs a surprisingly powerful emotional punch, proving there's more to Akunin than jolly pastiche. Highly recommended.' (GLOSS MAGAZINE (March 2007) )
'Whether in skittish or sombre mood, Akunin is immensely readable (and excellently translated by Andrew Bromfield); the beguiling, super-brainy, sexy, unpredictable Fandorin is a creation like no other in crime fiction.' (Marcel Berlins TIMES (10.2.07) )
'Fandorin [is] a debonair combo of Sherlock Holmes, D'Artagnan and most of the soulful heroes of Russian literature...Andrew Bromfield's translation is key to maintaining the entertaining period pastiche...Fandorin is very much a figure from the time of his creation: an all-knowing yet taciturn functionary with a past in espionage and a love of Japanese martial arts working in a Russia beset by internal division.' (Roger Perkins SUNDAY TELEGRAPH (19.2.07) )
'Fandorin is a delightful creation - a quirky gentleman sleuth who cuts an impeccably groomed dash through the courts and political intrigues of 19th century Russia...With an eccentric cast of supporting characters and a fleeting romance, Akunin's whodunit formula is irresistible.' (EASY LIVING (February) )
'a double treat for fans.' (Omer Ali TIME OUT (10-17 January) )
'Akunin brilliantly ratchets up the tension...and Fandorin's unveiling of the clues will keep you enthralled.' (Richard Mead FQ (January/February) )
'an excellent read.' (Laura Wilson GUARDIAN (13.1.07) )
'This...demonstrates Akunin's underlying seriousness of purpose in writing the Fandorin novels, whose clever devices and mischievous tricks disguise a determination to strip bare the extremes of human behaviour.' (Joan Smith SUNDAY TIMES (14.1.07) )
'The perfect Sunday afternoon read.' (Kath Murphy SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY (21.1.07) )
'ingenious and craftily plotted exploits.' (GOOD BOOK GUIDE (February) )
'this elegantly written book is fast-moving, witty and compulsively readable...The story packs a surprisingly powerful emotional punch, proving there's more to Akunin than jolly pastiche. Highly recommended.' (GLOSS MAGAZINE (March 2007) )
'Whether in skittish or sombre mood, Akunin is immensely readable (and excellently translated by Andrew Bromfield); the beguiling, super-brainy, sexy, unpredictable Fandorin is a creation like no other in crime fiction.' (Marcel Berlins TIMES (10.2.07) )
'Fandorin [is] a debonair combo of Sherlock Holmes, D'Artagnan and most of the soulful heroes of Russian literature...Andrew Bromfield's translation is key to maintaining the entertaining period pastiche...Fandorin is very much a figure from the time of his creation: an all-knowing yet taciturn functionary with a past in espionage and a love of Japanese martial arts working in a Russia beset by internal division.' (Roger Perkins SUNDAY TELEGRAPH (19.2.07) )
'an excellent read.'
'The perfect Sunday afternoon read.'
'ingenious and craftily plotted exploits.'
'ingenious and craftily plotted exploits.'
'Intricate, incredible, pleasurable.'
Two new adventures for Boris Akunin's well-loved, inimitable hero in which Erast Fandorin faces two very different adversaries: one, a deft, comedic swindler and master of disguise, whose machinations send ripples spreading through the carefully maintained calm of Moscow in 1886, and the other a brutal serial killer, driven by an insane, maniacal obsession, who strikes terror into the heart of the Moscow slums in 1889 - and who may have more in common with London's own Jack the Ripper than simply a taste for women of easy virtue. Peopled by a cast of eccentric characters, and with plots that are as surprising as they are inventive, Fandorin's 'Special Assignments' will delight Akunin's many thousands of fans, while testing their gentleman sleuth's powers of detection to the limit.
Two new adventures for Boris Akunin's well-loved, inimitable hero in which Erast Fandorin faces two very different adversaries: one, a deft, comedic swindler and master of disguise, whose machinations send ripples spreading through the carefully maintained calm of Moscow in 1886, and the other a brutal serial killer, driven by an insane, maniacal obsession, who strikes terror into the heart of the Moscow slums in 1889 - and who may have more in common with London's own Jack the Ripper than simply a taste for women of easy virtue. Peopled by a cast of eccentric characters, and with plots that are as surprising as they are inventive, Fandorin's 'Special Assignments' will delight Akunin's many thousands of fans, while testing their gentleman sleuth's powers of detection to the limit.
Boris Akunin is the pseudonym of Grigory Chkhartishvili. He has been compared to Gogol, Tolstoy and Arthur Conan Doyle, and his Erast Fandorin books have sold over ten million copies in Russia alone. He lives in Moscow.
2008-06-16 A misstep in an excellent series
Boris Akunin's 'Erast Fandorin' sries are amongst my few must-buy reads. Akunin is a tremendous writer who has managed to create an extremely interesting and likable character in Fandorin, the Russian State Investigator. Special Assignments sticks to the formula of the previous books in the series by writing the story from the point of view of a minor character - in this case, Fandorin's new secretary, Tulipov. By keeping the stories to reportage, Fandorin's methods are kept mysterious but not inaccessible and he makes enough mistakes in his investigations that he retains his likable humanity.There are two short novellas in this book. The first - The Jack of Spades - introduces a fearless theif who plagues Moscow's high society with a string of audacious crimes and it is a highly enjoyable romp. The second is where Akunin makes his error.
There seems to come a time in the career of any writer of period fiction when they suddenly feel compelled to introduce Jack the Ripper as an antagonist to their hero. It's a compulsion which should be fought, as the mention of one of the most over-used plot devices in fiction just makes me slap my hand to my face and mutter 'Oh, no, not again.'. Here the ripper makes his way from London to Moscow in order to taunt Fandorin and, well, you just wish that he hadn't. It's a great, well written and surprisingly sad story which loses a lot of it's punch by the inclusion of the Ripper. It doesn't need him, he detracts from the suspension of disbelief and enjoyment of the narrative, and he should't be there.
So - five stars (as usual) for the writing, but docked a full star for the includion of one of the biggest cliches possible in writing. 4/5.
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