- Archangel (Robert Harris novel)
"Archangel" is a novel by Robert Harris set in modern
Russia . It was published in 1998, and adapted for television by theBBC in 2005.Plot summary
While attending a conference in Moscow, a historian named Christopher "Fluke" Kelso (based on the historian
Norman Stone ) is met by an old man named Papu Rapava, who claims to have been present at the death ofJoseph Stalin . Immediately after Stalin's death,Lavrenty Beria supposedly took measures to secure a black notebook, believed to be Stalin's secret diary. Rapava spent years inKolyma after the authorities tried to extract the book's location from him, but he never revealed itndash and still has not, though he knows that shadowy agents are still watching him in case he should go near the mysterious thing.Kelso eventually locates the notebook, which Rapava left to his daughter just before being recaptured and tortured to death. It proves to be the memoirs of a young girl chosen by Stalin to be the mother of his secret heir. Following the trail to the remote northern city of
Arkhangelsk , Kelso comes face to face with Stalin's son.Raised in a log cabin filled with Stalin's personal effects, writings and recorded speeches, the son is a physical and ideological copy of his fatherndash it is revealed that he murdered the husband-and-wife KGB agents who had raised him from infancy when he decided they were untrustworthy. Young Stalin has been told that he would be sent for when it was time for him to assume control of his country, and he believes that Kelso is the promised messenger.
Stalin overcomes a special-forces unit sent to eliminate him (alarming Kelso by his ruthless and dispassionate use of violence) and boards a train headed for Moscow. At each station, ever-larger crowds gather to witness the apparent resurrection of the famous dictator, and it appears that he might be able to simply stride through the doors of the Kremlin and assume command.
As he steps off the train in Moscow, Rapava's daughter, who has made her way into the crowd at the train station, takes out her father's pistol. The novel ends there.
Television adaptation
Screenwriter sDick Clement andIan Le Frenais purchased the rights and hoped to make afilm version, but were unable to find sufficient backing. In the event, they wrote a two-parttelevision version starringDaniel Craig . The adaptation was screened onBBC One in theUnited Kingdom on Saturday 19th and Sunday 20 March 2005, each episode lasting one hour. The director wasJon Jones , and the adaptation was produced by the BBC's own in-house drama department, in collaboration with the independent production company Power andBaltic Film Services . It was filmed partly on location inMoscow , and also inRiga ,Latvia . Later in the year, it was released onDVD in the UK.External links
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/archangel "Archangel" television adaptation] at
bbc.co.uk .
* [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0426911/ "Archangel" television adaptation] at theInternet Movie Database .
* [http://www.bfs.eu.com/index.php?cid=140 "Archangel" television adaptation] atBaltic Film Services
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