Moss's novel about the Soviet MVD military intelligence, the KGB, the upper echelons of the Russian army, and the internal machinations of the Soviet government in that strange period from 1965 to 1985 between Khrushchev and Gorbachev, when Brezhnev, Andropov, and Chernenko, old men with close ties to the KGB ran the Kremlin is an intriguing one. The story is told from the perspective of a young Soviet army officer and it demonstrates an amazing amount of detail, color, and insider knowledge about life and politics in the Soviet Union during that very narrow era. Looking at the author's biography, I don't have a clue where he got all that information. In my humble opinion either had to been there for extended periods or had some background inside one of our own intelligence agencies. Most of it is a story of intrigue politics and espionage against the West, but the last third of the book takes it into a successful military coup against the government. That's the point at which the story loses me. I'm not sure whether it was supposed to be a "alternate history" piece in which we see what might've happened if Gorbachev and Yeltsin did not eventually taken over in the era of Glasnost. In any event, the concept of the Army taking over the Russian government was never all that far-fetched. Historically, it could've been the Army or the KGB. Given the current situation, it's obvious that the KGB won. If it had been the Army, who knows?