
A Whisper to the Living
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Narrated by:
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Daniel Oreskes
Inspector Porfiry Petrovich Rostnikov is an honest policeman in a very dishonest post-Soviet Union. He and his team are searching for a serial killer who has claimed at least 40 victims. And then there is the problem of protecting a visiting British journalist who is working on a story about a Moscow prostitution ring. In doing so Rostnikov and his team uncover a chain of murders that lead to a source too high to be held accountable if the police want to keep their jobs - or their lives.
©2009 Double Tiger Productions, Inc. (P)2010 BBC AudioListeners also enjoyed...




















Excellent book.
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Stuart Kaminsky is one of my 5 favorite authors
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Great series,
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Kaminsky fans will not be disappointed.
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Where does A Whisper to the Living rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?
Somewhere in the top third.What was one of the most memorable moments of A Whisper to the Living?
Attention: Spoiler of a kind. The end of the book is the wedding of Viktor Rostnikov, son of Porfiry and Sarah, and Elena Timofyeva, one of the detectives in the Senior Rostnikov's unit. We also discover that she is pregnant, and thus Porfiry and Sarah are grandparents. The scene is not just a bunch of drunken rowdy Russians, but it is played by describing the exits of various characters whom we know: Karpo, Tkach, the Yak and others. It is very moving in its way.What does Daniel Oreskes bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?
I love his variety of Russian accents. There are so many characters in the book that sometimes it is difficult to tell them apart, but the narrator helps us by varying the accents and other patterns of speech (Russianized American English, that is). I have read most of the books in this series, and I know and love these characters very well, although loving Emil Karpo is almost a self-cancelling phrase. He is a man with zero human feelings. But the primary characters are like a big, sprawling Russian family, and we get to know them as a group and as a collection of individuals.Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
Not possible for me. I don't have the stamina to listen to a book for ten plus hours without falling asleep. Also, I like to stretch out the experience, because when it's over, it's over.Any additional comments?
Mr. Kaminsky's imagination is limitless. he keeps creating new adventures for these people which are examined from many angles, from the small individuals all the way up to the national Russian and international Russia-in-the-world factors. The politics of Russia and Moscow in particular are described in ways that teach us a lot. These are treasures to read, and then to go back to and re-read after a few years have gone by.Mr. Kaminsky owns this little corner of the world.
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not worth it
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