The Lensky Connection

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Pub Date 28 Nov 2021 | Archive Date 14 Mar 2022

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Description

Russia, 1996.

In the run up to the Presidential election Major Valeri Grozky of the Federal Security Bureau (FSB) is fighting organised crime in St Petersburg, making his own stand against the drug gangs after the death of his older brother from a drug overdose. His fight puts him into an uneasy alliance with Natassja Petrovskaya, a journalist acquaintance determined to expose corruption.

Against his wishes, Grozky is selected for a Russian Military Intelligence (GRU) operation investigating an oligarch involved in an oil company privatisation fraud which an American Senate investigation will publicly expose. Unless the growing political scandal can be contained, it threatens to topple the Russian government.

Grozky is in a race against time to prove the oligarch’s guilt. As Grozky delves into the fraud, he discovers the trail leads outside Russia and dark forces are operating on both sides of the Atlantic. With the Russian election looming, he and Natassja are marked because they know too much. Grozky is forced to reassess his loyalties and confront the real enemy…

Russia, 1996.

In the run up to the Presidential election Major Valeri Grozky of the Federal Security Bureau (FSB) is fighting organised crime in St Petersburg, making his own stand against the drug...


A Note From the Publisher

Conrad Delacroix has been fortunate to spend a twenty-year career in Financial Services, primarily in IT-related roles. Following the strategic downsizing of GE Capital, he has been working as an independent management consultant, which has also allowed him to bring home ‘The Lensky Connection’.

Conrad Delacroix has been fortunate to spend a twenty-year career in Financial Services, primarily in IT-related roles. Following the strategic downsizing of GE Capital, he has been working as an...


Available Editions

EDITION Ebook
ISBN 9781803138213
PRICE £3.99 (GBP)
PAGES 200

Average rating from 2 members


Featured Reviews

This is a geopolitical thriller bursting at the seams with characters and incidents. Although set a quarter of a century ago it is particularly topical reading today with Russia's resurgence as a dangerous aggressor. The realism of the plot is aided by exhaustive research and intensely detailed location background. A gripping thriller, fascinating and intriguing, from beginning to end.

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The Lensky Connection, by Conrad Delacroix, is set in mid-1990s St Petersburg and Moscow, Russia.

FSB officer, Maj. Valeri Grozky, is assigned to police St Petersburg's organised crime problem, especially drugs, a cause near to his heart after his elder brother died from an overdose while battling his post-war demons. Maj. Grozky forms an uneasy alliance with a journalist, Natassja Petrovskaya, who shares information with him about the current organised crime situation, alluding to collusion and corruption in official offices. Maj. Grozky is reassigned to a Military Intelligence operation set up to protect the President Yeltsin's reputation against a possible expose relating to an oligarch and a failed oil company by a US Senate Committee during the lead up to the Presidential election. Secret plots are in play in both the US and Russia, and Maj. Grozky, with Natassja's help, gets much closer to the truth than anyone expected.

It's a fairly long and convoluted story - the plot is complex, the characters even moreso, which gives the whole work a strong sense of authenticity. In fact, what I liked about this book, even more than it's intriguing plot, was the strong feeling of reality - authentic dialogue, suspicions among even the closest of characters, and the uncertainty about which officials were corrupt and which were not. At times it was difficult to know which characters were on which side, further adding to the intrigue and suspense. The crisp writing style easily keeps the reader attached to the unfolding plot. An appropriate amount of supporting detail gives the reader a strong feel for the setting. (And it was good to read a book set in Russia that didn't go on and on about the cold or the snow.)

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