From Publishers Weekly
Highly praised for his innovative, expansive fiction ( American Falls ), Batchelor produces his most ambitious novel to date, recreating the dramas of the U.S.-Soviet space race, communist tyranny and complicated personal loyalties. Narrated by cosmonaut hopeful Peter Nevsky, set in the late '60s and based at Starry Town (home of the Cosmonaut Corps), the story hinges on the quest for the first moon landing. At the same time, it explores the realms of larger-than-life characters, including Nevsky's three mentors, who rule the Soviet space program, and the two women who change his future. The author renders culture and politics (including the '68 invasion of Czechoslovakia) to great effect; moreover, he utterly convinces the reader that a Russian manned mission to the moon was launched prior to the Apollo 11 . Testifying to Batchelor's vast range, the most moving development of all is Nevsky's religious awakening. And although neither the fine points of aeronautics nor the senseless brutality sanctioned by Soviet officials makes for light reading, this novel is very much a page-turner, combining the turbulence of betrayal and evil with the boyish, shoot-for-the-stars wonder that is Batchelor's forte. Here, the fatalism of 19th-century literary masters coexists honestly with futuristic imagination and hope.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
A year before the first lunar landing, Peter Nevsky arrives at Starry Town, the training center for Soviet cosmonauts. Full of youthful enthusiasm to reach the moon, he soon becomes enmeshed in political intrigue and ruinous romance. Along with the Martian Troika, his three godfathers, who were flying aces during World War II and who now provide the driving force behind the Russian space program, Nevsky battles a family curse and the senseless evil of State Security. Batchelor's massive revision of Soviet history is fabulous but convincing, and it provides a fitting context for high adventure and moral reflection. With exciting scenes of combat from Leningrad to Kazakhstan, this novel offers entertainment on a grand scale. It is also a thoughtful account of a young man's confrontation with the evil inside his country, his family, and himself.
- Albert E. Wilhelm, Tennessee Technological Univ., CookevilleCopyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.