“In fact, it’s a concise history of Ukraine in a form of a mystery novel,” I thought after reading a half of it.
Now that I finished the book it is clear that the adjective “concise” is misleading: the author obviously tried to write a kind of encyclopedia on all things Ukrainian :)
If you’d like to know more about the country’s history, culture, sightseeing, its life in 1990s and early 2000s, its diaspora abroad, and the like, all in 352 pages, then this novel might help
The author knows the subject fairly well. Her description of Ukraine, of Russia and USSR are very realistic. And not very flattering either. Personally, I was impressed: even the most minor details correspond to the post-soviet world where I grew up.
I should mention though that during the period she describes (1990s-early 2000s) Ukraine suffered a major economic and social crisis. By now, the country became much more prosperous, comfortable and friendly.
I really enjoyed the first 75% of the book: the novel seemed dynamic and easy to read (you open it on the first page – and you only “wake up” some 50 pages later :) ). But the last quarter was a bit too messy. There were lots of details which, while interesting, were not necessarily relevant to the story (e.g., Marina’s biography, description of Edmonton). Ok, Taras’ past gives us a better understanding of this character… but why don’t to tell it earlier?
As for the love story, it could be stronger. Andriy is too ideal to be true: never scared, never hesitating, never shy, and never quarreling. Or, maybe, that’s how Kate sees him? After all, she only spent with him a couple of days when he was at his best. So, she falls in love (the True Love, so to say) for the rest of the book.
But the Kate’s character is well-developed, and so is Taras’ character, and a number of minor characters as well (like Sara, for example).