I didn't realize when I requested the book that it was intended for a teenage and YA audience, and I am well beyond that age category. My four-star rating is based on what I believe will be its appeal to a younger audience, and hope will introduce them to some recent cultural history of the Soviet Union and to the music of the Beatles. They should find it an exciting story.
I found this to be a nostalgic read. I remember when the Beatles and their music first burst on the western scene. I had been a tourist in Russia during the time Kruschev was in control. Much later, I travelled to some countries comprising part of the former USSR and later to Russia again after Putin took over. While reading the book, the song Back in the USSR resounded in my mind.
Harrison George, a fourteen-year-old, overly imaginative but quiet American boy, arrives in Moscow to visit his parents, diplomats at the American embassy. He was inadvertently named with a Beatles name in reverse. He brings a Beatle tape with him, which he shares with a friend, Pru. She is the daughter of reporters, a Canadian and an Ethiopian, is adventurous and speaks Russian. She was named after a Beatles song, Dear Prudence.
On the plane, Harrison was seated beside a Russian man who expressed an interest in Western culture and the music of the Beatles. Later at a Christmas party at the embassy, he sees his mother in conversation with the man from the plane. They are discussing the hidden spirituality and religion in Russia, and his mother quotes Lenin in favour of science and cultural norms. The man retorts with a quote from Lennon (John), suggesting a decline in spirituality. Harrison learns the man is KGB. Will he be a friend or for when they meet again?
When Harrison and Pru visit a market, they stop at a booth where some black-market tapes are sold. They see an extraordinarily beautiful woman, and Pru decides to follow her as a lark. They had noticed a man at the booth and see his dead body on the street. He has a tattoo marking him as a member of the Russian Mafia.
Decadent western culture has been suppressed and outlawed in the USSR. Beatle records have become a valuable commodity for collectors. The Mafia is intent on getting possession of the White Album (missing in Russia) and enriching themselves by making copies of the record album. The Minister of Culture is after the album to destroy it.
Harrison and Pru find themselves on a wild adventure after seeing the dead member of the Mafia lying in the street. They are captured by the Mafia and find themselves in a series of incidents involving Beatles music. Harrison phones an old classmate in America, Max, a physics genius. Not wanting to be overheard on the phone, they devise a backwards code like the Beatles inserted in an album. Max suggests that Harrison and Pru are not involved in these events by chance or coincidence. By following his physics reasoning, they are the cause and attract such events. Tapes of rock music, including Beatles, can be found on the black market, some disguised as legal Russian music. On these, Pru and Harrison find codes directing them to illegal concerts. With collectors, the Government and Mafia after the White album, the two young people decide it is safer to have the album in their possession. Not a wise decision.
The story concludes with a dazzling New Years' celebration in Red Square, where the teens have a dangerous encounter. A lovely outcome takes place, but only in Harrison's imagination, but we hope it becomes true.
Recommended for young people for its musical references, intrigue, and exciting chase scenes. It is due to be published on December 1. Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for an advance copy.