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In 1934, Khristo Stoianev, a new recruit in Russia's elite intelligence corps, began a new kind of war in which the killing was secret, calculated, and efficient. But now he is a hunted man, betrayed by Stalin's purges, and before his silent war is over, every rule will be broken . . . and all loyalties discarded. Dark Star.
1. How does Alan Furst use the crosscurrents of local jealousies and feuds at the start of Night Soldiers as a means of animating the plot?
2. Discuss Khristo’s experience at the training school in Moscow. How does it prepare him for a later career in the NKVD?
3. A decade after the action of Night Soldiers ends, what would you expect Khristo, Ilya Goldman, and Faye Berns to be doing?
4. Alan Furst has called Night Soldiers a “panoramic spy novel.” What do you think he means by this description?
5. Examine the character of Robert Eidenbaugh. In what ways does he represent the values of America in the 1940s?
6. Critics praise Furst’s ability to re-create the atmosphere of World War II—era Europe. What elements of description make the setting come alive? How can you account for the fact that the settings seem authentic even though you probably have no firsthand knowledge of the times and places he writes about?
7. Furst’s novels have been described as “historical novels, ” and as “spy novels.” He calls them “historical spy novels.” Some critics have insisted that they are, simply, novels. How does his work compare with other spy novels you’ve read? What does he do that is the same? Different? If you owned a bookstore, in what section would you display his books?
8. Furst is often praised for his minor characters, which have been described as “sketched out in a few strokes.” Do you have a favorite in this book? Characters in his books often take part in the action for a few pages and then disappear. What do you thinkbecomes of them? How do you know?
9. Consider Furst’s use of suspense in Night Soldiers. How does he build suspense? Discuss different methods he uses in the novel.
10. Love affairs are always prominent in Furst’s novels, and “love in time of war” is a recurring theme. What role does the love affair play in Night Soldiers?
Anonymous
Posted February 23, 2003
Khristo Stoianev is the protagonist of this novel about the years before World War II. He is a Bulgarian, growing up as a fisherman working the Danube. He is about 18 when his brother is beaten to death by a Fascist troop in his home town, and Khristo is thereby recruited into the Soviet NKVD as a spy. The first long part of the book is about his training in Arbat Street in the methods of spycraft, and the formation, among his companions, of a brotherhood that will tie together the plot through the sections that follow. Soianev is sent to Spain during the Civil War, but escapes the purges when one of his brotherhood warns him of his arrest, lives in Paris and is peripherally involved in a killing by Bulgarian emigres, and is sent to prison at the behest of British secret service. He is released by another of the brotherhood, joins the resistance and is smuggled out of France to Switzerland by the Americans. Sent back to Prague as a spy, he finally learns of a defection and enlists the aid of the Americans to exfiltrate the NKVD spy. The novel is always literate, well paced, with believable characters and interesting historical comments. Thoroughly enjoyable, I read most of this in one evening.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 30, 2012
Hated it.
7028825
Posted January 31, 2011
a peak lnto a world that is little known. written ln furst's true fashion.this book was my first furst and kept me reading many more
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.BlueVilla
Posted December 5, 2009
Furst is a master of the espionage book, set in the 1930s and 1940s.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted February 25, 2004
I just read Night Soldiers and will now read all of Furst's espionage novels. The writing is fine, the characters sympathetic and believable, the tradecraft authentic, the historical background excellently developed. I couldn't put it down and really cared about several characters. I have one minor criticism, which may relate to an unavoidable problem in a book of such sweeping scope. He introduces some intriguing plot twists which he doesn't sufficiently develop. For example, in the Spanish Civil War segment, Fay Bern has very strong reason to be suspicious of the loyalties of her lover, Andre. She could have picked up on the clues and faced a decision to trust him or not. Or suspicion could have fallen on her, with her able to escape only by pointing to him. The dramatic possibilities were terrific. Instead, the theme just gets dropped. There are a few other loose ends like this, but the novel is nearly 500 pages, so something had to be sacrificed. Despite such minor quibbles, I am looking forward to reading Dark Star and then his other books.
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Overview
Bulgaria, 1934. A young man is murdered by the local fascists. His brother, Khristo Stoianev, is recruited into the NKVD, the Soviet secret intelligence service, and sent to Spain to serve in its civil war. Warned that he is about to become a victim of Stalin’s purges, Khristo flees to Paris. Night Soldiers masterfully re-createsthe European world of 1934–45: the struggle between Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia for Eastern Europe, the last desperate gaiety of the beau monde in 1937 Paris, and guerrilla operations with the French underground in 1944. ...