• The Unpossessed City
Jim Vilatzer was going nowhere--working in his parents' restaurant, sleeping in his childhood bedroom--until he ran up gambling debts that forced him to go somewhere far away fast.

He uses his Russian-language skills (learned from his grandparents) to cadge a job in Moscow finding and interviewing survivors of the Gulag. At first, he only finds that they are well hidden and leery of sharing their horrific stories, but he also discovers that he's falling in love with their homeland. He is intoxicated by Moscow's brooding, ironic atmosphere, its vast reservoir of entrepreneurial energy, its otherworldly churches and majestic subways. On any given day, petty indignities are more than offset by random acts of kindness.

Jim's taste for gambling is satisfied merely by living in a city that teems with risk and promise. So he blithely accepts a big win when a chance meeting with a lovely aspiring actress leads not only to romance but also to her grandfather, a concentration camp survivor who does actually want to share his story. Soon Jim is on a roll, scoring interviews with four other survivors in as many days, learning harrowing and fascinating things about bygone atrocities and feeling like he has finally found where he belongs.

But his apparent success has earned him the attention of Russia's Interior Ministry and the CIA. Jim has become an unwitting cog in a scheme to spirit Soviet scientists and their deadly secrets out of Russia and into the hands of the highest bidder. Pursued ruthlessly by both sides, he must flee again, this time to the lawless border country, where an economist-cum- mobster is preparing to peddle the world's most dangerous technologies to whichever terrorists can muster the cash first.

The Unpossessed City makes of its setting an intricate, irresistible character. With taut, ingenious plotting and incisive prose, Fasman engages our most visceral fears and throws brilliant light on our most primal drives to feel that we belong, to find love, to become better than we are.

---

AUTHOR
Jon Fasman was born in Chicago in 1975 and grew up in Washington, D.C. He was educated at Brown and Oxford Universities and has worked as a journalist in Washington, D.C., New York, Oxford, and Moscow. His writing has appeared in The Times Literary Supplement, Slate, The New York Times Magazine, The Moscow Times, and The Economist. His first novel, The New York Times bestseller The Geographer's Library, was published in more than a dozen languages.

NARRATOR
John Farrage is an actor, voice-over artist and theater director based in Seattle where he has worked at ACT Theatre, Seattle Repertory Theatre, Seattle Shakespeare Company, as well as many others. John has worked as a theatre artist, nationally and internationally, for the last 20 years including 4 years living and creating theatre in Prague, Czech Republic.

---

REVIEWS
Publishers Weekly
"Fasman takes a compassionate look at the hard truths of modern-day Russia in his absorbing second novel."

Booklist
"Deftly, even lovingly achieved; Fasman's Moscow is beautiful, tragic, brutal, and exhilarating."

Kirkus Reviews
"If Fasman was worried about the second-novel syndrome, he needn't have been--great fun in a great, if grim, place."



The Unpossessed City

Author: Jon Fasman

Narrator: John Farrage

ISBN: 9781593164157

SRP: $29.95

Length: 12:20:00

Item No: LL434

Available on the following websites: Amazon, Apple, Audible, AudioBookStore, Audiobooks, Blackstone, Catalist, Epic!, Kobo, Libro.fm, Mackin, Overdrive, StoryTel, Tumblebooks.