Boris
Akunin’s third Erast Fandorin adventure Leviathan
was published in 1998, English translation from the Russian by Andrew
Bromfield, 2004. I read and enjoyed his
first adventure, The Winter Queen in
October, 2004. The second book in the series is The Turkish Gambit.
Fandorin
started out as a police detective, and then worked for the secret police, and
in this book he’s a diplomat, destined for service in Japan.
Leviathan possesses several idiosyncratic features. It begins with notes from French
police commissioner Gauche’s file, regarding the mass murder of ten individuals
in a Parisian mansion. Then there’s a medical report concerning the deaths –
all but one being poisoned. A statuette of the Indian god Shiva was stolen,
together with a painted shawl. The owner of the house, Lord Littleby was
bludgeoned to death. Next, we have two press cuttings – one of which reveals
that the statuette is found… A single clue suggests that the murderer would be
a passenger on the luxury British steamship Leviathan
sailing from Southampton to Calcutta. Gauche booked passage.
Gauche deduces
that the criminal he seeks is one of the following: Sir Reginald
Milford-Stokes, exhibiting signs of mental aberration; Mr Aono, a Japanese
nobleman, silent and diffident; Mrs Renate Kleber, a pregnant wife of a Swiss
banker en route to join her husband; Miss Clarissa Stamp, a newly rich English
spinster; Mr Truffo, the ship’s chief physician; Mr Sweetchild, an opinionated
Indologist; Mr Boileau, a tea trader and philanthropist; and, finally, the
Russian diplomat, Fandorin.
The
story is told from the point of view of a number of characters: Gauche himself
(third person narrative), Milford-Stokes writing first person to his absent wife,
Renate Kleber and Clarissa Stamp (both third person), Mr Aono (printed in two
columns sideways on, no doubt to suggest the first person diary entries are
written in Japanese [gimmicky, but not distracting]).
To be
expected, there are other deaths and suspicion builds. There are revelations,
and some poignant tales to tell. Gauche comes across as a bombastic
self-important detective (‘It was possible to tell a great deal about a man
from his moustache’) (p26) who tends to arrive at the wrong theories, often
corrected by the imperturbable Fandorin.
Akunin
captures the period – it’s 1878 – and the opulence of the steamship. ‘The
breakfast served on the Leviathan was not some trifling Continental affair, but
the genuine full English variety: with roast beef, exquisite egg dishes, blood
pudding and porridge.’ (p43) He also reveals Mr Aono’s culture with great
effect – which is not surprising since under his real name the author is an
expert on Japan, has translated Japanese and served as the editor-in-chief of
the 20-volume Anthology of Japanese
Literature.
He exhibits
a fine eye for detail and imagery, too. ‘in the flickering lightning the rain
glittered like steel threads in the night sky, and the waves frothed and foamed
white in the darkness. It was an awesome night.’ (p188)
The
set-up, the mix of characters and the crime itself echo Agatha Christie, and
this is not surprising since Akunin apparently set out to write Fandorin novels
in every sub-genre of the detective novel. His first was a conspiracy, his
second a spy case, his third this Agatha Christie homage, and so on. He has
identified sixteen sub-genres, in all, and has written fourteen so far. In
addition, he wanted to create different types of human characters. Indeed, the
Wikipedia entry for Grigol Chkhartishvili (Boris Akunin) makes fascinating
reading in itself.
In the
entry List of best-selling books the Erast Fandorin series has sold in excess
of copies. Typically, a new book in the series sells about 200,000 copies in
the first week.