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Lie in the Dark

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Vlado Petric is a homicide investigator in war-torn Sarajevo. When he encounters an unidentified body near “sniper alley,” he realizes that it is the body of Esmir Vitas, chief of the Interior Ministry’s special police, and that Vitas has been killed not by any sniper’s aim but by a bullet fired at almost pointblank range. Searching for the killer in this “city of murderers,” Petric finds himself drawn into a conspiracy, the scope of which goes beyond anything he could possibly have imagined.
Lie in the Dark brilliantly renders the fragmented society and underworld of Sarajevo at war—the freelancing gangsters, guilty bystanders, the drop-in foreign correspondents, and the bureaucrats frightened for their jobs and very lives. It weaves through this torn cityscape the alienation and terror of one man’s desperate and deadly pursuit of bad people in an even worse place.
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    • Library Journal

      May 15, 1999
      Having dug into Yugoslavia's recent past for what undoubtedly was meant to be a taut whodunit, journalist and first novelist Fesperman has come up with something that reads more like a report from the battlefield than a novel. The story, unfolding against a backdrop of war-ravaged Sarajevo, concerns itself with a police homicide investigator's efforts to solve the murder of the chief of the interior ministry's special police. Fesperman describes a world of terror and disintegrating civilization; treachery, corruption, shake-downs, sniper attacks, shelling, and a staggering accumulation of daily atrocities darken every page. Unfortunately, fiction seems secondary to what can only be described as a brilliant piece of war reportage--Fesperman was a European correspondent for the Baltimore Evening Sun during the war in Yugoslavia. One is left with the impression that he is using his negligible plot merely as a line on which to hang powerful and descriptive word pictures. Recommended only if another mystery is needed.--A.J. Anderson, GSLIS, Simmons Coll., Boston

      Copyright 1999 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from April 15, 1999
      The term "mean streets" takes on an additional shade of meaning in this riveting first novel. Vlado Petric is a homicide investigator in besieged Sarajevo, and walking any street means listening for incoming artillery and intuitively gauging snipers' lines of fire. In the chaos of war, the Bosnian Ministry of the Interior has formed a special police force that has taken over the high-profile cases. Vlado's department is left with the dregs--domestic violence fueled by madness, stress, or alcohol. But when the chief of the special police is killed and snitches hint at his involvement in the black market, Vlado is given the investigation to help convince the UN that the Bosnian government is committed to truth and justice. This is a thoroughly satisfying cop novel. What makes it special, however, is its vivid sense of place. Fesperman, a journalist who has covered the confused conflicts that are shattering Yugoslavia, gives readers the tastes, smells, sounds, and privations of everyday life and an understanding of the roots of an appallingly muddled and tragic war. ((Reviewed April 15, 1999))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 1999, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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