The first 60% of the novel was fascinating. Then things slowly fell apart. Finally, at the point in which the reader expects the "hero" to succeed, or maybe not succeed, he simply disappears. End of the novel. No further dialogue, no mention of any other main characters, no idea of what happened. So three stars is 60% of five stars, and at 60% the novel began to fade, finally ending with less than a whimper. However, Edward Topol lived in Russia, during the heyday of the Soviet Union and the novel is full of the reality of life in that miserable country at that time, so kudos for sharing that. But it was a long way to go to get to the biggest non-ending in the history of novels.