Billion-Dollar Brain. Len Deighton
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Название: Billion-Dollar Brain

Автор: Len Deighton

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Историческая литература

Серия:

isbn: 9780007342990

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       Chapter 10

       Section 4: Leningrad and Riga

       Chapter 11

       Chapter 12

       Chapter 13

       Chapter 14

       Section 5: New York

       Chapter 15

       Chapter 16

       Section 6: San Antonio

       Chapter 17

       Chapter 18

       Chapter 19

       Section 7: New York

       Chapter 20

       Section 8: London

       Chapter 21

       Chapter 22

       Chapter 23

       Section 9: Helsinki and Leningrad

       Chapter 24

       Chapter 25

       Chapter 26

       Section 10: London

       Chapter 27

       Chapter 28

       Appendix One

       Appendix Two

       Appendix Three

       Footnotes

       Keep Reading

       About the Author

       By Len Deighton

       About the Publisher

       Introduction

      ‘Very few people go there. Even reporters who live there are restricted to the places they permit them to visit,’ said the lady in the travel agency. ‘And the organized bus tours are for sympathetic trade union people and party members. There would be lots of food and wine but you wouldn’t get to see anything much. You wouldn’t like that, would you?’

      ‘No,’ I said.

       ‘There is another way but we have never tried it. You have to pay for an interpreter who is with you all the time.’

       ‘Could I go where I liked?’

       ‘That’s what the Russians say. But your interpreter will be some kind of secret police stooge and it will be very expensive.’

       ‘I’ll try it.’

      The lady in the travel agency was right about very few Westerners going to the Baltic States. And in the frozen depth of winter visitors were non-existent. But once there the frustrations, delays and stupidity that I had suffered in getting permission to go to Latvia proved worthwhile. This satellite of the Soviet Union, deep behind the iron curtain, and in a region the Russians considered strategically vital, was astonishing. The wartime England in which I’d grown up was a dismal and deprived place but visiting Riga at that time was like a giant step back in time. The people in wartime England had never lost their underlying optimism that one day the war would be won, and good times restored. But the city of Riga was a quite different environment; a large prison camp with an occupying Russian army arresting anyone who smiled.

      My interpreter never smiled. Like ‘sinister KGB agent’ sent from Central Casting, she was a tall, middle-aged woman with the pale complexion that permanent winter confers. Her long fingers constantly fidgeted as they stroked her dark sable coat or adjusted the fit of an imposing hat of matching fur. In a country where opportunities for investment were few, valuable furs were not uncommon, but its possession still proclaimed her status. Sometimes she removed her hat to reveal hair tightly held in a bun by decorative hairpins. She puzzled about the sort of places I wanted to see as research for the book but after saving me a couple of times when I stepped out in front of speeding army trucks, and interceding when I made a rude sign to a traffic СКАЧАТЬ