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Havana Bay: A Novel (Mortalis.)

Havana Bay: A Novel (Mortalis.)
Author: Martin Cruz Smith
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Category: Book

List Price: $15.00
Buy New: $7.00
You Save: $8.00 (53%)



New (25) Used (11) from $6.49

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 123 reviews
Sales Rank: 158273

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 368
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 7.8 x 5.2 x 1

ISBN: 0345502981
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780345502988
ASIN: 0345502981

Publication Date: May 20, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: Brand New! Can ship quickly from clean, non-smoking home. Thanks.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Havana Bay: A Novel
  • Mass Market Paperback - Havana Bay (Arkady Renko Novels)
  • Audio Cassette - Havana Bay (Arkady Renko Novels)
  • Paperback - Havana Bay (Random House Large Print (Paper))
  • Hardcover - Havana Bay: A Novel
  • Audio Download - Havana Bay
  • CD-ROM - Havana Bay
  • Paperback - Havana Bay
  • Paperback - Havana Bay

Similar Items:

  • Wolves Eat Dogs
  • Stalin's Ghost: An Arkady Renko Novel
  • Polar Star: A Novel (Mortalis.)
  • Red Square (Arkady Renko Novels)
  • Gorky Park: A Novel (Mortalis.)

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
In this fourth book in Martin Cruz Smith's splendid series, an amiable Irish American gangster explains to Arkady Renko what he and the other 84 wanted Americans hiding out in Cuba do with themselves. "We try to stay alive. Useful. Tell me, Arkady, what are you doing here?" "The same," says Renko--and it's true. His life as a Russian cop has become so bleak and lonely that he takes any opportunity to shake things up, even spending his own savings to fly to Havana when an old colleague is found dead--floating inside an inner tube after night-fishing in Havana Bay. Renko sets out to make himself useful in this shabby, fascinating, haunted country whose inhabitants look on Russians with the cold disdain of survivors of a nasty divorce.

As he did so well in Gorky Park, Smith again makes Renko very much a classic Russian hero in temperament and tradition, but also the eternal outsider. He is at times close to the edge of despair--but his trip to Havana restores his natural curiosity and life force.

In this hot Havana, ripe with the fruity smell of sex, Renko keeps his Moscow overcoat on--until an equally idealistic and out-of-place young female cop gets him to loosen up. There's an unusually complex plot, even for the sly strand-spinner Smith. He raises baffling questions: Why would a group of military plotters order illegal lobsters in a fancy restaurant and then not eat them? And his descriptions of Cuban life are dead-on, reminding us on every page what a superb stylist he is. --Dick Adler

Product Description
When the corpse of a Russian is hauled from the oily waters of Havana Bay, Arkady Renko comes to Cuba to identify the body. Looking for the killer, he discovers a city of faded loneliness, unexpected danger, and bewildering contradictions. His investigation introduces him to a beautiful Cuban policewoman; to the rituals of Santeria; to an American fugitive and a group of ruthless mercenaries. In this place where all things Russian are despised, where Hemingway fished and the KGB flourished, where the hint of music is always in the air, Arkady finds a trail of deceit that reaches halfway around the world–and a reason to relish his own life again.


From the Paperback edition.



Customer Reviews:   Read 118 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars John LeCarre move over!   September 5, 2008
Cruz Smith's best since Gorky Park. Protaganist, Arkady Renko, wounded though he is, manages to rise to the occasion in his pursuit of identifying a fellow Russian pulled from the waters of Havana Bay. Set in today's Cuba, with its beauty and crumbling decay wrought by years of communism, our hero teams up with a beautiful Cuban policewoman and becomes embroiled in a world where Russians are despised. Throw the rituals of Santeria into the mix and you have a recipe for murder, deceit, and perhaps reasons for Arkady to get his life back on track. A wonderful read with great characters!


1 out of 5 stars not very interesting   September 4, 2008
and couldn't identify with any of the characters. the story was weak uninteresting and irrelevant. Only made it to about the 5th chapter


4 out of 5 stars Arkady Renko Heads South - Way South   July 26, 2008
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Arkady Renko began his fictional career as a Soviet militia (police) investigator. By the third book in the series Red Square, the Soviet Union had collapsed - into the dustbin of history as it were - and in the fourth installment he has traveled to Havana on his own dime to investigate the disappearance of an old `friend'. As the book opens, Renko is present at bay side when the Cuban police retrieve a grossly decayed body from the water. Is it Pribluda? And how has he died?

Renko, however, is distracted by his own more personal grief. Devastated by the death of his wife at the hands of incompetent Russian doctors, Renko prepares to kill himself in Havana. Just then Arkady is interrupted by Cubans trying to kill him, which rather oddly nudges him back toward life. He forms a liaison with beautiful Cuban detective Ofelia Osorio - a liaison which neither of them particularly desires. Russians are persona non grata in post-Soviet era Cuba, a country now cut off from its source of largesse.

Cuba seems shabby and run-down. We see otherwise good Communists dabbling in strange voodoo-like rituals. Nothing works very well, except perhaps the people (well some of them anyway). Old cars, iffy electricity, doubtful food supplies.

Renko and Osorio slowly unravel a complex web of intrigue. Along the way, Cruz Smith populates his book with various interesting characters including a wealthy ex-pat American (suggestive of Robert Vesco), a former black power American radical (modeled on William Lee Brent?), a homicidal police detective, and an ingenious, but devious pathologist. A plot if afoot to make a killing, millions of dollars and more, but how high does it go?

Good fun for fans of Arkady Renko, even if it is not the best book in the series.



4 out of 5 stars Out of Place in Havana   July 26, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Arkady Renko began his fictional career as a Soviet militia (police) investigator. By the third book in the series Red Square, the Soviet Union had collapsed - into the dustbin of history as it were - and in the fourth installment he has traveled to Havana on his own dime to investigate the disappearance of an old `friend'. As the book opens, Renko is present at bay side when the Cuban police retrieve a grossly decayed body from the water. Is it Pribluda? And how has he died?

Renko, however, is distracted by his own more personal grief. Devastated by the death of his wife at the hands of incompetent Russian doctors, Renko prepares to kill himself in Havana. Just then Arkady is interrupted by Cubans trying to kill him, which rather oddly nudges him back toward life. He forms a liaison with beautiful Cuban detective Ofelia Osorio - a liaison which neither of them particularly desires. Russians are persona non grata in post-Soviet era Cuba, a country now cut off from its source of largesse.

Cuba seems shabby and run-down. We see otherwise good Communists dabbling in strange voodoo-like rituals. Nothing works very well, except perhaps the people (well some of them anyway). Old cars, iffy electricity, doubtful food supplies.

Renko and Osorio slowly unravel a complex web of intrigue. Along the way, Cruz Smith populates his book with various interesting characters including a wealthy ex-pat American (suggestive of Robert Vesco), a former black power American radical (modeled on William Lee Brent?), a homicidal police detective, and an ingenious, but devious pathologist. A plot if afoot to make a killing, millions of dollars and more, but how high does it go?

Good fun for fans of Arkady Renko, even if it is not the best book in the series.



5 out of 5 stars Havana Bay   June 9, 2008
Martin Cruz Smith has never dissapointed me and Havana Bay is simply splendid. People have labled his Renko series as part of the "spy" genre and that is selling them short. Renko has never been a spy but rather an everyman who happens to be a policeman with deep undercurrents and a painful personal life.

In Havana Bay he goes to Cuba to identify the remains of his "friend" a rough KGB type of the old school who declined to shoot Renko in a previous novel, he appears to have died naturally if accidentaly. Needless to say this is not the full story and soon he is deep in an internal Cuban plot with layers that seem impossible to reconcile but Cruz smith does it leaving no lose ends that spoil so many thrillers with improbability that simply defy reasonable probability.

From the effort of his hunt and a believable caring relationship he is again rejuvinated and I can't wait until Renko's next accident of life
is reported on.



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