Title:
The
People’s Will
Author:
Eric Berbig
Genre:
Mystery/Historical Fiction
ISBN:
978-0-615-40842-2
Year
Published: 2010
Pages:
300
Edition:
First
Publisher:
Eric Berbig
Reviewer:
Joyce Shafer - http://Self-PublishedAuthorsBookReviews.weebly.com
Author’s website: http://thepeopleswillbook.com/
The
People are restless; some are bent on murder and destruction—and the tension is
building. Primarily set in pre-Revolution days in St. Petersburg , Russia ,
this compelling historical mystery
novel is based on actual events. Serfs have been emancipated and more people
are allowed to be educated, but improvements meant as a result of these and
other changes are slow to happen for the people most affected. The disenfranchised
new working-class discover “Horrid living conditions, poverty, debt—were
constant companions.” One particular leader of a splinter revolutionist group
believes the only way to get the right message across to the tsar and others
who need to hear it is to plan and execute something that makes it clear it was
no random event, but a decisive one. Where better to create such a spectacle
than in public, in front of the grandest opera theater in town, at the opening
of a new show. The plan is to do the deed and blame the Nihilists, because this
leader and his group must remain hidden and unknown until the moment they can safely
reveal themselves, once they have public support. The event goes off as
planned, and Detective Yuri Vladimirovich Petrov decides to visit the scene,
where his presence gets noticed by someone from the Okhrana, as well as one of
the perpetrators.
Yuri
rose to his position in the investigative division of the St. Petersburg Police
Department on merit, not politics or who he knew. He sticks to investigative
basics and has a higher success rate for solving crimes than anyone in his
division. His instincts are keen and he follows where they lead him. He’s on
the case to find those behind this crime. It’s not his district, so this shouldn’t
be his case, but his reputation for competency and, particularly, discretion in
a prior case involving a member of the royal family motivated the appropriate
investigative service, the Okhrana, to include him. Yuri’s instincts tell him
there is more to his involvement than this. Trying to find the right trail to
follow leads to many frustrations as well as good leads, and into disturbing
realizations about how his government actually works at the inner level. Trying
to determine who, what, when, and how haunts him, even as he makes headway in
his investigation. His instinct, and a few experiences he has along the way, indicates
something even bigger is being planned. His gut tells him he needs to hurry. The
question that drives him is Will he be too late.
I
don’t usually go for historical novels as my personal reading choices, but this
one is done well and worth the read, and is as much a mystery novel as an
historical one. The author, Eric Berbig, sets the tone and mood, and has
excellent plot and character development. He builds the tension and sustains it
all the way through with a well-organized progression of the story, The writing
is smooth, flowing, and so descriptive that you feel the settings, locations,
and time period, as well as the emotions of the characters; he engages the
senses. This book held my attention all the way through and contains several
riveting scenes. It could have used very slight editing touch-ups, but
instances are few and do not detract from this engaging story. It’s top-of-the-line storytelling from
start to finish.
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