The premise of this story is fantastic!
Billie Bradford, Fist Lady of the United States, (FLOTUS), has traveled to Moscow where, unbelievably, she is abducted by the Soviet KGB. Unknown to the American delegation, Bradford’s been “replaced” by Vera Vavolova, a superbly talented Russian actress turned undercover agent. Vavolova has undergone years of vigorous, demanding training for her “starring role” as First Lady. The ultimate purpose of the mission is to obtain secret information from the President himself.
After all, if he can’t trust his own wife, who can he trust?
Even as I read the front cover summary, the questions were already popping into my head:
How would the kidnappers get past the First Lady’s Secret Service detail?
How would they pull off such an ambitious with no one noticing it?
Looking for clues, I then turned to the publisher’s page near the front of the book, noticing that the year of the book’s release was 1980.
1980, I reminded myself was the year that the “real life” White House was on the verge of a major leadership transition. The Sunday School teaching peanut farmer from Georgia had one foot out the door, the smiling cowboy governor from California, one-foot in.
Almost two generations ago…
The Secret Service of the time, I guessed, must have been a much smaller force. The press of 1980, reporting at a much slower, (but ultimately higher quality) reporting coverage than today’s corporate approved instant news. In 1980, the Internet was at least fifteen years away from becoming a mainstream reality for many people.
But even taking those factors into account, how would Vavolova pull off such a demanding disguise? How did the Soviets manage to find an exact replica of such a famous woman? How would the Soviets manage “keeping” First Lady Bradford for such an extended period of time while her double did her spy work?
Or was the intent of the Soviets much darker?
Did they plan to “keep” Bradford at all?
Wallace chose a daunting subject for this novel. Would the plot be sufficiently believable? Would I be distracted by too many outlandish plot reaches?
These were the questions I brought with me into the start of reading this book.
And given the solid four-star rating I’m giving it, you may have your answer to how satisfied I was in the end.