
First published in Russia in 1998; published in translation in Great Britain in 1999; published by Grove Atlantic/Mysterious Press on July 4, 2017
The State  Counsellor is a man named Erast Petrovich Fandorin. The novel, set in  Tsarist Russia, is the sixth in a series by Boris Akunin. 
Fandorin has been assigned responsibility for  the safety of General Khrapov in Moscow. The revolutionaries blame  Khrapov for the brutal flogging and suicide of a young woman before he  was made the Governor of Siberia. Khrapov, who claims it wasn’t his  fault and doesn’t understand all the fuss about “an ordinary bourgeois  girl,” has been hidden away in Siberia for his own protection, but the  time has come to return him to Moscow. His return is brief, however, as a  revolutionary assassin who goes by the name Green enters the train,  posing as Fandorin, and dispatches Khrapov in the opening pages.
The  real Fandorin is briefly arrested, but it soon becomes clear that the  murderer was in imposter. It then becomes Fandorin’s duty to find the  villain who killed the villain. Only a few people in various security  roles knew that Fandorin was assigned to protect Khrapov, so Fandorin  begins his inquiry by asking whether any of those might have leaked the  information.
A seductress named Diana becomes a key character.  She adds flavor to the novel by expounding on the weaknesses of men and  the various ways in which women can exploit those weaknesses. A  seductress named Esfir, clearly sympathetic to the revolution, wastes no  time in taking Fandorin to bed. Modern women are a true mystery to poor  Fandorin, but they are considered outrageous by high society women  (even as they are admired by high society men).
The novel  explores the utility of terrorism as an instrument of revolution — in  this case, to spark a revolution that will overthrow Tsarist rule. Green  is the novel’s philosopher of terror. But the plot explores the  corruption of power and the ruthlessness of people who seize it. The  mystery involves the identity of the person who is betraying the police  by helping Green, and while the truth is telegraphed in a way that makes  it easy to guess the betrayer’s identity before it is revealed, I  prefer that to mystery stories that plant no clues at all.
Fandorin  is an interesting, stuttering detective who is forced to cope with a  doomed political structure that hampers his ability to do his job. The  story is cerebral, but it has spurts of action that keep it lively. Life  in Tsarist Russia is well imagined. I haven’t read other entries in the  series but it is easy to enjoy The State Counsellor as a stand-alone  mystery novel.
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