Book review: A Train To Potevka
Posted: 1 April 2008 at 17:48:00
Another book I read recently is "A Train To Potevka" written by Mike Ramsdell, a native Utahn.
Ramsdell spent many years working in Military
Intelligence (MI) and with his mastery of the German and Russian languages,
was involved in missions behind the Iron Curtain in the 1980s.
This book, Ramsdell's first, is classified as fiction, but it's clear from reading that it is, at a minimum, based on real events. The stories take place shortly before the collapse of the Communist government in the former Soviet Union. Ramsdell was involved in a mission to capture a member of the Russian mafia for being involved in fraudulent activities surrounding the construction of the U.S. embassy in Moscow.
Just as the mission was getting close to finishing, the team's security is compromised. Ramsdell sends his two other operatives home while he "cleans up" and prepares to leave as well. He is intercepted by a mafia hit man and must find a way to escape and get out of the city to a safehouse in the town of Potevka.
This is a great book, especially for a first-time author. It ends up being both a love story and a spiritual story. For readers who are LDS, they will be especially touched by the spiritual side of the story. All readers will likely be captivated by the nitty-gritty details of Ramsdell's writing as he describes degrading conditions in the Siberian provinces of the former Soviet Union near the fall of Communism.
You can purchase this book from Amazon.com.