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- <text id=89TT1711>
- <title>
- July 03, 1989: Murder At Sea
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- July 03, 1989 Great Ball Of Fire:Angry Sun
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 63
- Murder at Sea
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Paul Gray
- </p>
- <qt> <l>POLAR STAR</l>
- <l>by Martin Cruz Smith</l>
- <l>Random House; 386 pages; $19.95</l>
- </qt>
- <p> In Gorky Park (1981), Martin Cruz Smith showed a good way to
- turn one among the thousands of detective novels published
- annually into a runaway best seller. The three crucial steps: 1)
- construct a plot with plenty of corpses and exfoliating
- complexities; 2) provide a beleaguered and therefore
- sympathetic hero, one whose problem involves not only solving
- a crime but avoiding extermination by a small army of people who
- do not wish the truth to be known; 3) set the action in a place
- that is inaccessible and romantically forbidding -- in the case
- of Gorky Park, Moscow and environs.
- </p>
- <p> These days, the Soviet Union and its capital evoke less
- mystery and fewer perturbations than they did eight years ago.
- Gorbachev and glasnost have helped see to that. But Smith's
- formula for success ought to remain valid if a suitable
- substitution can be found for step 3. In Polar Star, Smith
- finds it. One dead body leads to others, along an arc of
- increasing menace and violence. Arkady Renko, the intrepid
- police investigator of Gorky Park, reappears, again called to
- rescue a situation that shadowy, powerful forces may not want
- to be saved.
- </p>
- <p> Only the venue has changed. Instead of Moscow, Renko must
- navigate the intricacies of the Polar Star, a huge Soviet
- factory ship plying the waters of the Bering Sea. Its mission is
- both prosaic and delicate. It must gather and process 50,000
- tons of seafood to contribute to the nourishing of the Soviet
- people. But its suppliers, who do the actual fishing in
- exchange for cash, are American trawlers.
- </p>
- <p> This joint commercial venture between historic enemies takes
- place in one of the earth's chillier, less hospitable locales.
- And when a huge net full of an incoming catch drops the body of
- Zina Patiashvili onto the deck of the Polar Star, the whole
- enterprise becomes icier still. Patiashvili had been a popular
- member of the Polar Star work force, dishing up food in the mess
- and making herself available to a goodly number of male comrades
- on board and, so rumor has it, to more than a few visiting
- American fishermen.
- </p>
- <p> Her lifeless reappearance raises a number of troubling
- questions. Murder? Bad. Suicide? Much better. In the good old
- days, the inconvenient matter could have been put on ice until
- the ship returned to its home port of Vladivostok, where the
- official party whitewash would have explained everything. Not
- now. The ship's captain understands the new realities: "The
- problem is the Americans. They will watch to see whether we
- conduct an open and forthright investigation."
- </p>
- <p> That calls for Arkady Renko, who happens, by chance and
- Smith's ingenuity, to be a lowly worker on the ship's "slime
- line," hacking up fish and hunkering down from further
- recriminations for his dogged sleuthing in Gorky Park.
- Convinced that his investigating days are over, Renko neither
- seeks nor wants this assignment, which threatens his anonymity
- and possibly his safety. Significant people on the ship would
- also like to see him remain hidden and humbled. One of his
- enemies-to-be reminds him of his expulsion from the only group
- that truly matters in the Soviet Union. Renko replies,
- "Membership in the Party was too great an honor. I could not
- bear it."
- </p>
- <p> Renko's laconic sense of the ridiculous endeared him to
- millions of Western readers during his last adventure and will
- no doubt do so again. "In irony," he remarks about his
- homeland, "we lead the world." There is, it must be added,
- something incongruous in a character who so diligently labors
- for a political system that tries to crush him. When one
- character asks why he so stubbornly pursues the facts, Renko
- replies, "That's a mystery to us all." And hardly the only one
- in this action-heavy novel. If anything, the plot of Polar Star
- can seem, to the jaundiced eye, a trifle rigged, with shocks
- occurring at metronomic intervals. Such objections, though, are
- likely to crop up only when the novel has been finished and set
- aside. In the full rush of the chase, Smith and Renko still
- seem irresistible.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-