RUSSIAN BAN
HIS LATEST novel begins with a gruesome KGB assassination, and charts the actions of a ruthless Moscow regime.
So Jeffrey Archer, pictured, may not be surprised – if a little disappointed – that he has failed to find a publisher for his book Heads You Win in Russia.
The former MP, 78, has been turned down by 21 companies, even though 16 of his previous releases were translated for Russian audiences.
In being effectively banned by Russia, he can now claim to rank alongside George Orwell and Boris Pasternak, whose novels Animal Farm and Doctor Zhivago were outlawed by communist censors. Heads You Win – released in Britain last week – follows protagonist Alexander Karpenko, who flees Russia in the sixties following the assassination of his father. He returns years later to confront his past.
Archer, who spent two weeks researching the novel in St Petersburg last year, has even been warned by wellplaced political friends to hire bodyguards while promoting the new novel.
Jeremy Trevathan of Pan Macmillan, Archer’s UK publisher, said: “Jeffrey is the master of the unexpected plot twist, and this book is one of his absolute best in that regard. It is a real shame that it is being denied to Russian readers and fans, who would especially enjoy the twists and turns in this particular novel.” |