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Kidnapped

A Story in Crimes

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From Ludmilla Petrushevskaya, New York Times bestselling author and Russia's greatest living absurdist, comes an elaborate family drama, social satire, and burlesque of twists, coincidences, and hijinks.

Kidnapped is a madcap crime spree that caroms from crisis to crisis, through lands real and imagined. It tells the tale of Sergei Sertsov, not one but two boys from Moscow with more than just a name in common, and the women who go to great lengths to protect them. The story unfurls in a whirlwind of deceit and double crossing—babies are switched at birth, documents forged, palms greased, identities assumed, deaths faked, and authorities duped. Across decades and continents, the narrative veers from a trade office in tropical Handia, to Russia as it plunges through perestroika and into post-Soviet free fall, to a mansion in opulent Montegasco at the start of the twenty-first century. With a dizzying array of characters and settings, Kidnapped is a hilarious saga of determined women triumphing over their many oppressors to save the people they love.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 20, 2023
      Petrushevskaya (The New Adventures of Helen) offers a campy story involving babies switched at birth in 1980s Moscow. Shortly after pregnant 21-year-old Alina Rechkina is abandoned by her husband and left penniless, she goes into labor. Her roommate on the maternity ward, Masha Sertsova, is set to leave the country after her baby’s birth to join her husband in the foreign service in South Asia. Instead, Masha dies during her labor. Alina, frightened for her own child and resentful of the prosperous life awaiting Masha’s son far from a collapsing Russia, impulsively switches their infants’ identifying bracelets. Later, she’s surprised to hear from Masha’s widower, Sergei Sertsov, who asks her to assume Masha’s identity and help raise his child in Handia. She agrees and spends three years there, enduring Sergei’s verbal abuse before he abandons her. Back in Moscow, Alina moves into Masha’s old apartment, where the consequences of a previous baby switch and audacious scheming from Sergei play out to dizzying effect. Though the plot can be confusing, there’s plenty of cutting satire of corruption in late- and post-Soviet Russia. This irreverent and absurdist outing will keep readers guessing to the very end. Agent: Julia Goumen, Banke, Goumen & Smirnova.

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