Compare prices and save on cheap books at CheapestBookPrice.com
Compare prices and save on cheap books at CheapestBookPrice.com HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
Go to CheapestBookPrice USA!Go to CheapestBookPrice UK!
Multi-Store Book Search
  
(What's this?)
Selected Product:

Child 44
Child 44

Hardcover
Author: Tom Rob Smith
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Release Date: 2008-04-29
ISBN-10: 0446402389
ISBN-13: 9780446402385
List Price: $24.99
Average Customer Rating:
Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5
Similar Products

The Story of Edgar Sawtelle: A Novel (Oprah Book Club #62)
The Story of Edgar Sawtelle: A Novel (Oprah Book Club #62)
ISBN-10: 0061768065
ISBN-13: 9780061768064
List Price:$25.95


The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
ISBN-10: 0307269752
ISBN-13: 9780307269751
List Price:$24.95


Moscow Rules
Moscow Rules
ISBN-10: 0399155015
ISBN-13: 9780399155017
List Price:$26.95


The Spies of Warsaw: A Novel
The Spies of Warsaw: A Novel
ISBN-10: 1400066026
ISBN-13: 9781400066025
List Price:$25.00


City of Thieves: A Novel
City of Thieves: A Novel
ISBN-10: 0670018708
ISBN-13: 9780670018703
List Price:$24.95


Our Review: To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Child 44 by Tom Rob Smith (ISBN-10: 0446402389, ISBN-13: 9780446402385).

At this time we have not yet written a review for Child 44 by Tom Rob Smith (ISBN-10: 0446402389, ISBN-13: 9780446402385). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews.

Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com

Summary:
A propulsive, relentless page-turner.
A terrifying evocation of a paranoid world where no one can be trusted.
A surprising, unexpected story of love and family, of hope and resilience.
CHILD 44 is a thriller unlike any you have ever read.

"There is no crime."

Stalin's Soviet Union strives to be a paradise for its workers, providing for all of their needs. One of its fundamental pillars is that its citizens live free from the fear of ordinary crime and criminals.

But in this society, millions do live in fear . . . of the State. Death is a whisper away. The mere suspicion of ideological disloyalty-owning a book from the decadent West, the wrong word at the wrong time-sends millions of innocents into the Gulags or to their executions. Defending the system from its citizens is the MGB, the State Security Force. And no MGB officer is more courageous, conscientious, or idealistic than Leo Demidov.

A war hero with a beautiful wife, Leo lives in relative luxury in Moscow, even providing a decent apartment for his parents. His only ambition has been to serve his country. For this greater good, he has arrested and interrogated.

Then the impossible happens. A different kind of criminal-a murderer-is on the loose, killing at will. At the same time, Leo finds himself demoted and denounced by his enemies, his world turned upside down, and every belief he's ever held shattered. The only way to save his life and the lives of his family is to uncover this criminal. But in a society that is officially paradise, it's a crime against the State to suggest that a murderer-much less a serial killer-is in their midst. Exiled from his home, with only his wife, Raisa, remaining at his side, Leo must confront the vast resources and reach of the MBG to find and stop a criminal that the State won't admit even exists.

Tom Rob Smith graduated from Cambridge in 2001 and lives in London. Child 44 is his first novel.



Customer Reviews
Average Customer Rating: Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5

A thrilling page turner...
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
Outstanding book. I couldnt possibly say enough good things about this one!

For a 1st time author, Tom Rob Smith hit a grandslam with "Child 44".

"Child 44" is loosely based on the real life Russian serial killer Andrei Chikatilo (The Butcher of Rostov) who actually killed around 52 women and children.

The storyline in "Child 44" is completely made up, by that I mean it isnt the actual story of Chikatilo, but a fictional one based off his murders.

Awesome suspense, great action, great characters!!

The way he ties everything together at the end is amazing, you'll think you have some things figured out and realize you didn't, later in the book you'll start thinking you know the ending and you won't even be close!

Producer Ridlely Scott has already purchased the rights to the film for this book, cant wait to see this one on the big screen!

Great, great read, highly recommended to all & especially to fans of David Benioff's "City of Thieves"!

This should be a beat seller!!!
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
I keep waiting for the world to wake up and figure out that this deserves to be a Top 10 best seller. I can't imagine a more engrossing debut novel.

Review
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
Leo Stepanovich Demidov is a member of the MGB, the State Security Force for the Soviet Union and one of MGB's top investigative detectives. When it comes to loyalty, Leo is the most loyalists of men. He serves his country well and for that he is rewarded handsomely. In a country where any talk of disloyalty whether it be from reading a book or talk of being a traitor, can be punishment by death.

Suddenly Leo finds himself in a moral situation. He is put in charge of investigating his wife, Raisa. Accusations have been made against Raisa saying she is a traitor to her country. Leo now has to make a choice whether he turns his wife in like a good agent or stand up for him and his wife. The choice is obvious. Leo gets demoted to the lowest of lows when he is sent away to be part of the militia. His duties now consist of him cleaning prisoner's cells. When the body of a fourteen year old girl is found with her mouth filled with dirt and her intestines ripped out, Leo believes this was no accident but indeed a murder. He starts investigating and what he discovers is more heinous than anything Leo could imagine.

I kept seeing Child 44 showing up everywhere on the web. People were saying good things about this book. I am proud to say I too can't stop saying wonderful things about Child 44. This can only be achieved by an author like Tom Rob Smith. Mr. Rob Smith fused this book with such raw emotions of love, loyalty, loss, and trust. When you take a character like Leo, who experiences all of these emotions at the same time you end up with something truly amazing that will leave readers talking about Child 44 for a long time to come. I know I will. Child 44 is Tom Rob Smith's first novel. He should be proud of it. I give this book five stars and if I could give it more I would. I anxiously await his next novel.

There's a killer on the road, his brain is squirming like a toad.
Customer Rating:  Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4
On November 22, 2008 Ukrainians in Kiev, Ukraine marked the anniversary of a 1932 famine, known as Holodomor (Death by Hunger), in which upwards of 3.5 million Ukrainians starved to death. That famine serves as the prologue for Tom Rob Smith's novel "Child 44". In that prologue two young Ukrainian children are sent out by their mother to scavenge for food. The scavenger hunt has terrible consequences for both brothers. The story then jumps ahead twenty years, at the end of Stalin's long reign, and introduces us to State Security Force (MGB) office Leo Demidov. Leo is a war hero and, by all accounts, a dedicated and competent police detective. A child of one of Demidov's colleague is found dead near some railroad tracks. The MGB rules it an accidental death. The family insists it was murder. The rest of the novel takes us on Demidov's reluctant journey, one that convinces him that not only was the child murdered but that the victim was but one of many at the hands of what will later become known as a serial murderer.

The plot develops along two parallel tracks (pun intended): Demidov's investigation and the bureaucratic obstacles placed in the way of that investigation. The MGB and the entire collective weight of the USSR can not nor will acknowledge the existence of a `serial killer'. That is politically and practically impossible in a nation well on its way to being a worker's paradise. Demidov must deal not only with a smart and sociopathic murderer but with a system that will not tolerate the investigation of something that it does not accept can exist.

Child 44 works pretty well. The story, based loosely on the story of the USSR's first acknowledged serial killer, seems to get the atmospherics just right. The bureaucracy and vicious plotting by and among Demidov's colleagues also has a realistic feel. Smith keeps the plot bubbling and manages to reveal just enough detail to keep the reader guessing. Although some elements of the outcome are quite predictable given the book's prologue he does manage to introduce enough twists at the end to make most readers a little surprised by some of the climactic events of the novel.

All in all Child 44 was a satisfying thriller. The writing could have been more polished in places. Sometimes Smith delves into some formulaic descriptions of some characters in the story and sometimes he can present an exciting event in a tone that may be just a bit too breathless. However, since the book is more plot-driven than `literary'-driven I think those minor flaws are easily overlooked. So, four stars for those looking for a thriller with an international flavor.
L. Fleisig

A remarkable page turner, or allegorical...
Customer Rating:  Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4
Smith's title was recommended to me by a retired NCO, who like me,is fascinated by the excesses of totalitarian governments. He could not put the book down, he said. Well, I could, having extended family whose ethnic base was murdered off by the millions in the Ukraine. The cleansing of the population went on full bore,and we did not care,because they had no oil we could steal. I took Mr. Smith's tome more personal than a mere work of fiction. Then, there was my mother-in-law, who sent her relatives in Russia packages of army blankets and coffee, as if the commies would not steal whatever they wished and as if our own Uncle Joe McCarthy would not add her to his list as somone else who should be marched off to an American Gulog. But, as the story goes, Leo relentlessly pursed a hideous serial killer of children the state denied existed. And, I will not even mention the fantastic coincidence in the final chapters, or the killer's "motivation." And, then, the book ends happily ever after... Incredible!!! Now, as an allegory, suppose a country suspended its citizens' constitutional rights with some chuckled faced law such as the Patriot Act. Suppose the public is disarmed. Suppose education is taken over by No Child Left Behind nincompoops. Then, how much different will our position be than that of Leo's?

























Suggestions | Book Store Reviews | Site Map | Book Reviews | Contact Us
© 2008 . All rights reserved. Privacy Statement and Disclaimer
web site design and support by Crystal Solutions