Erast Fandorin
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Erast Petrovich Fandorin (Эраст Петрович Фандорин), fictional 19th-century Moscow detective, is the hero of the most popular historical detective stories in Russia by writer Boris Akunin.
Boris Akunin set off to write a cycle about Fandorin with exploration of every single subgenre of detective in mind, from spy novels to serial killers. However bold this goal was, plots of the novels are not all equally interesting, but Russian editions provide a very insightful and interesting description of times written in good language. Image:Tabakov.jpg
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Overview
To date there are 11 books about Fandorin, several translated into English and some other European languages. The Crime Writers' Association of Britain nominated Akunin for the 2003 Dagger Awards for The Winter Queen, a translation of the novel "Azazel".
To date, four books featuring the sleuth Erast are available in English, translated by Andrew Bromfield. They are "The Winter Queen", "Leviathan", "Turkish Gambit" and "The Death of Achilles". Differing greatly in tone and setting, nevertheless they all display a knowing self-mockery of the genre, lively characterisation, and intricate plots that develop in an almost cinematic fashion.
The novel series traces the career and development of Erast Fandorin, born 1856, through the course of 25 years. Starting out as a destitute officer of the Moscow criminal police in 1876, Fandorin by his extraordinary criminalistic talent is quickly involved in important matters of state. The story of "Turkish gambit" is set against the backdrop of the Russo-Turkish War, in particular the 1877 Siege of Pleven. After the war, Fandorin asks for a remote post in diplomatic service and spends four years in the service of the Russian Empire's ambassador to Japan. In "Leviathan", Fandorin is involved in a series of murders on the passenger ship taking him to his new post. The Japanese adventures of Fandorin are described in 2nd part of "Diamond Chariot". Image:Mikhalkov.jpg
During his absence, Alexander II is assassinated by revolutionaries, and after his return, under Alexander III, Fandorin is involved in the increasing terrorist activity of the Narodniki that will lead up to the Russian Revolution of 1905. On his return from Japan in 'Death of Achilles" Fandorin enters the service of knyaz Dolgorukoi, governor of Moscow. His first case is the death of the "White General" Mikhail Skobelev (called Sobolev in the novel), one of his acquaintances from the 1877 campaign in the Balkans, in a Moscow hotel. In "The Decorator" Fandorin is confronted with an appearance of Jack the Ripper in Moscow. After involvement in a dirty political scheme, described in "Councellor of the state", Fandorin resigns from his state service and becomes a freelancer. In "Coronation, or the last of the Romanovs", Fandorin is investigating criminal activity surrounding the ascension of tsar Nicholas II and the Khodynka catastrophe of 18 May 1896. The subsequent novels, "Mistress of Death" and "Lover of Death", portray Fandorin as a private investigator in two criminal cases in Moscow, dealing with a suicide club and a smuggling ring.
Novels
- Note:Years in brackets show the year when the respective book is set.
- Azazel / Азазель (1876, translated as The Winter Queen) [1]
- Turkish Gambit / Турецкий гамбит (1877) [2]
- Leviathan / Левиафан (1878, also translated as Murder on the Leviathan) [3]
- Death of Achilles / Смерть Ахиллеса (1882) [4]:
- The Jack of Spades / Пиковый валет (1886) [5]
- The Decorator / Декоратор (1889, also translated as The Set Designer) [6]
- The Councillor of State / Статский советник (1891)
- Coronation, or the last of the Romanovs / Коронация, или Последний из романов (1896)
- The Mistress of Death / Любовница смерти (1900)
- Lover of Death / Любовник смерти (1900)
- Diamond Chariot / Алмазная колесница (first part - 1905, second one - 1878/9)
Adaptations
Azazel was filmed in 2003 by Alexander Adabashyan. Paul Verhoeven is set to make a film about the same novel [7]. Two further Fandorin novels, Turkish Gambit and The Councillor of State, were made in 2005 into big-budget movies by Timur Bekmambetov and Philipp Yankovsky correspondingly.
See also
External links
- Official Website: www.akunin.ru
- Review of The Winter Queen
- http://www.gambitfilm.ru/ (2005 movie homepage)
- http://www.statskyfilm.ru/ (2005 movie homepage)it:Erast Petrovič Fandorin