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Reviewed by Anne Boling for Readers' Favorite
People were starving to death in the 1933, Ukraine, Village of Chervoy. Pavel salivated when he saw a cat; the young boy captured the pathetic creature and killed it, knowing his family would eat that night. However, he never returned home, His younger brother and mother were left to mourn his loss.
Twenty years later, children were missing. This time it was the son of a low ranking MGB. Leo Stepanovich Demidov was a loyal Soviet Citizen. He was a war hero and a Security Ministry Officer. He suspected a serial killer, but it was considered treason to think such a thing. The Soviet Union never recognized crime for it would blemish their reputation. When Leo persisted in his inquiry, he was demoted. He and his wife were incarcerated. Their only hope was to find the serial murderer that the administration refused to admit existed.
In his debut novel, Tom Rob Smith takes us deep inside Stalinism. His descriptions of the shocking life of the 1933 citizens are heart wrenching. He reminds me of why I am blessed to be an American. Smith writes a gripping novel of political intrigue, loyalty, and murder. There are some very disturbing scenes in this book. The faint of heart should avoid it. The ending has a riveting twist that caught me unaware. Smith reached into history, pulled out a true account, and shaped his plot around the event. Fans of thrillers will relish Child 44.