Saul Pope
Synopsis
Jonathan David, 25, a graduate of the University of Northern England (Goole
Campus), starts having dreams in which people visit him and tell him what
they’re thinking. One night a beautiful but sad-looking girl visits him, telling
him that she wants to meet him. He has no idea what to do until he sees her next
to the Avrora – a boat-museum, as his combined honours degree taught him, that
is moored permanently in St. Petersburg. The help of a drunken family friend
helps him to get over to St. Petersburg in double quick time, and he sets about
finding her with only his personal stereo and favourite music as company.
Only in St. Petersburg, a city of about 4.5 million people, does Jonathan
realise the size of the task ahead of him. He is helped in his early days by
Vlad, or The Man, a well-dressed but shady character he meets in the lobby of an
international hotel. The Man latches onto him, worrying and eventually
frightening Jonathan. He seems to be following him…
Olesya, meanwhile, is in love with Jonathan, having seen him on a British
Council video of Blind Date, and spends most of her days doodling his
name over her exercise books and dreaming of meeting him. The St. Petersburg of
1997 is a difficult place to be however, and she soon falls for Ruslan, a boy
from her institute. Their relationship starts well but soon turns sour and she
starts yearning for Jonathan again, especially after she accidentally discovers
that he’s in the city.
Jonathan works out several plans to help him meet Olesya, helped by his
dreams, but each plan is seemingly thwarted, or else the victim of extremely bad
luck. The final plan is curtailed aggressively by a mystery woman. Will he ever
meet Olesya?
The book is set in St. Petersburg of the 1990’s in a Russia that was led by
Yeltsin, crawling with organised crime and riddled with uncertainty about what
was round the corner. As well as the three main characters there are ‘New
Russians’, the first people to get rich after the USSR’s collapse, lecherous
ex-pats, who have failed in their lives at home, and British Council officials
who drink tea at 5.00 every day, convinced they are not part of the chaos
outside.
Of course it all ends well, but how Jonathan and Olesya get there is not
revealed until the final few pages. This book is aimed at any one who likes a
good story – first and foremost, that is what it is all about. As well as this,
however, it aims to catch something of a world that has recently departed us – a
Russia that was lonely, crime-ridden and permanently on edge as it struggled
through its first decade.