Reviews for The defector : a novel

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

In 1973, a Soviet test pilot defects to the United States, bringing the super-advanced MiG-25 Foxbat with him—along with deeply mysterious intentions. While vacationing in Israel, Kazimieras Zemeckis, a onetime U.S. Navy test pilot and current NASA official, is shocked to witness what appears to be an Israeli plane shooting down the MiG. The intelligence-gathering Soviet plane is known to fly at such great heights and with such speed that getting close enough to threaten it isn’t thought possible. Though reported dead, the Soviet pilot, known as Grief, has actually landed the plane and immediately asks to defect. After alerting U.S. officials about what he'd seen, Kaz winds up accompanying Grief to the Air Force’s highly classified Area 51 testing and training site in Nevada, where the Soviet is debriefed as technicians take apart and study the MiG. Grief, with whom Kaz bonds as a fellow flyer, is eager to learn about the new American F-15 fighter, among other things. Hadfield, in a sequel to The Apollo Murders (2021), spends a lot of time with hardware, flight technology, nuclear rocket engines, and such, showing off his own experience as a top astronaut and test pilot. There are tense meetings in Moscow and Israel, a sizable dose of back history and a meeting of astronauts and cosmonauts in preparation for Apollo-Soyuz, the first crewed international space mission. Lots of interesting stuff, but the climactic showdown in the air between good guy and bad guy is rushed. And though the Yom Kippur War assumes great importance early in the novel with Golda Meir's appearance, it's quickly forgotten as soon as she’s off the page. Still, there's much to enjoy for fans of the series. A well-rearched but ultimately flat thriller. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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