Difference between revisions of "Bad Day in Minsk"

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Tom is to travel to Minsk, pretending to be Rory Milford, but travelling under the name of Wilberforce. He will be met on arrival by [[Yevgenei Smirnov]], who will take him to the [[Minsk Metropole]] where he will meet his client [[Nikita Petrov]], head of the [[The Petrov Family|Petrov family]]. In the event, he is not met by Smirnov - instead he is picked up by [[Anya Kozlova|Anya]], who has apparently already disposed of Smirnov. Anya takes Tom to [[The Pripyat Glorious People's Kindergarten Forest Camp and Ideological Retraining Centre|a camp in the forest]] near to the border with Ukraine, near Pripyat. This turns out to be the rural headquarters of the [[The Gretzky Family|Gretzky family]]. Here he meets their current leader [[Yuliya Gretzky]] and the young prodigy and heir apparent [[Alexei Gretzky]]. It turns out that Alexei met the [[Archimedes and Pythagoras Vavasor|Vavasor twins]] when he was very young, and is something of an enthusiast for their work. Apparently Rory Milford also knew them, which is news to Tom. Alexei gives Tom a mathematical paper that he's written for him to evaluate.
 
Tom is to travel to Minsk, pretending to be Rory Milford, but travelling under the name of Wilberforce. He will be met on arrival by [[Yevgenei Smirnov]], who will take him to the [[Minsk Metropole]] where he will meet his client [[Nikita Petrov]], head of the [[The Petrov Family|Petrov family]]. In the event, he is not met by Smirnov - instead he is picked up by [[Anya Kozlova|Anya]], who has apparently already disposed of Smirnov. Anya takes Tom to [[The Pripyat Glorious People's Kindergarten Forest Camp and Ideological Retraining Centre|a camp in the forest]] near to the border with Ukraine, near Pripyat. This turns out to be the rural headquarters of the [[The Gretzky Family|Gretzky family]]. Here he meets their current leader [[Yuliya Gretzky]] and the young prodigy and heir apparent [[Alexei Gretzky]]. It turns out that Alexei met the [[Archimedes and Pythagoras Vavasor|Vavasor twins]] when he was very young, and is something of an enthusiast for their work. Apparently Rory Milford also knew them, which is news to Tom. Alexei gives Tom a mathematical paper that he's written for him to evaluate.
  
Tom knuckles down to life in the camp, taking part in the activities and secretly trying to make sense of the equations that Alexei has given him, under the watchful eyes of Anya and her sidekick [[Novikov]]. Disaster strikes, however, when the Gretzkys hear of someone else arriving at the Minsk Metropole claiming to be Rory Milford. They show Tom a picture of him and it turns out to be [[Benjamin Unsworth]]. Tom manages to laugh the whole thing off, but decides that he needs to make a getaway. He steals a knife and some steaks from the kitchen and uses the steaks to keep the two guard dogs [[Fang]] and [[Slobber]] occupied while he sneaks out of the front entrance. After a terrifying journey through the darkened forest, he finds an abandoned cottage, breaks into it and beds down for the rest of the night.
+
Tom knuckles down to life in the camp, taking part in the activities and secretly trying to make sense of the equations that Alexei has given him, under the watchful eyes of Anya and her scary sidekick [[Novikov]]. Disaster strikes, however, when the Gretzkys hear of someone else arriving at the Minsk Metropole claiming to be Rory Milford. They show Tom a picture of him and it turns out to be [[Benjamin Unsworth]]. Tom manages to laugh the whole thing off, but decides that he needs to make a getaway. He steals a knife and some steaks from the kitchen and uses the steaks to keep the two guard dogs [[Fang]] and [[Slobber]] occupied while he sneaks out of the front entrance. After a terrifying journey through the darkened forest, he finds an abandoned cottage, breaks into it and beds down for the rest of the night.
  
He awakes to find that the cottage isn't abandoned after all, but very much occupied by [[Artem Bogdanovich|Artem]] and [[Grandma Bogdanovich|his mother]].
+
He awakes to find that the cottage isn't abandoned after all, but very much occupied by [[Artem Bogdanovich|Artem]] and [[Grandma Bogdanovich|his mother]]. Artem permits him to stay there and he and Grandma hide him from Anya and Novikov when they come looking for him. They celebrate that evening by getting very drunk on homemade vodka. The next day, Tom borrows Artem's phone and climbs onto the roof to get a signal. He manages to have a brief conversation with Benjamin Unsworth, having obtained his phone number from [[Margot Evercreech]] via [[Derek Winscombe|his father]]. He gets Helen Matheson's number from Benjamin, but at this point the battery runs out and he has to come back down again. The power fails at this point, so he can't recharge Artem's phone. However, it turns out that Artem's son [[Mikhail Bogdanovitch|Mikhail]] is due to arrive soon and he can give Tom a lift to Minsk.
  
 
More to come.}}
 
More to come.}}

Revision as of 14:38, 18 July 2022


Bad Day in Minsk  
Bad Day in Minsk.jpg
First edition
Author Jonathan Pinnock
Cover artist kid-ethic
Language English
Publisher Farrago Books
Publication date 2021
ISBN 978-1-78842-303-8
Preceded by The Riddle of the Fractal Monks

Bad Day in Minsk is a book by Jonathan Pinnock. It is the fourth in the Mathematical Mystery series and was published by Farrago Books in April 2021.

Blurb

High Jinks in Minsk

Tom Winscombe is having a bad day. Trapped at the top of the tallest building in Minsk while a lethal battle between several mafia factions plays out beneath him, he contemplates the sequence of events that brought him here, starting with the botched raid on a secretive think tank and ending up in the middle of the Chernobyl exclusion zone.

More importantly, he wonders how he’s going to get out of this alive when the one person who can help is currently not speaking to him.

Join Tom and a cast of disreputable and downright dangerous characters in this witty thriller set in a murky world of murder, mystery and complex equations.

Critical Reception

The reception to the book was generally extremely favourable.

Summary of Plot