Martin Cruz Smith, acclaimed author of 'Gorky Park,' dies at 82
Smith died Friday 'surrounded by those he loved,' according to his publisher, Simon & Schuster. Further details were not immediately available, but Smith revealed a decade ago that he had Parkinson's disease, and he gave the same condition to his protagonist.
His 11th and final Renko book, 'Hotel Ukraine,' will be published this week. The Associated Press praised it as a 'gem' that 'upholds Smith's reputation as a great craftsman of modern detective fiction with his sharply drawn, complex characters and a compelling plot.'
Among Smith's honors were being named a 'grand master' by the Mystery Writers of America, and winning the Hammett Prize for 'Havana Bay' and a Gold Dagger award for 'Gorky Park.'
Born Martin William Smith in Reading, Pennsylvania, and a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, where he studied creative writing, Smith started out as a journalist, including a brief stint at the AP. He had been a published novelist for more than a decade before he broke through in the early 1980s with 'Gorky Park.' His book came out when the Soviet Union and the Cold War were still very much alive and centered on Renko's investigation into the murders of three people whose bodies were found in the Moscow park cited in the title.
'Gorky Park,' praised as a compelling and informative take on the inner workings of the Soviet Union, topped The New York Times' fiction bestseller list and was later made into a movie starring William Hurt.
″'Gorky Park' is a police procedural of uncommon excellence,' Peter Andrews wrote in the Times in 1981. 'Martin Cruz Smith has managed to combine the gritty atmosphere of a Moscow police squad room with a story of detection as neatly done as any English manor-house puzzlement. I have no idea as to the accuracy of Mr. Smith's descriptions of Russian police operations. But they ring as true as crystal.'
Smith's other books include science fiction ('The Indians Won'), the Westerns 'North to Dakota' and 'Ride to Revenge,' and the 'Romano Grey' mystery series. Besides 'Martin Cruz Smith' — Cruz was his maternal grandmother's name — he also wrote under the pen names 'Nick Carter' and 'Simon Quinn.'
Smith's Renko books were inspired in part by his own travels in the Soviet Union and he would trace the region's history over the past 40 years, whether the Soviet Union's collapse ('Red Square'), war in Chechnya ('Tatiana'), or the rise of Russian oligarchs ('The Siberian Dilemma').
The AP noted in its review of 'Hotel Ukraine' that Smith had devised a backstory pulled straight from recent headlines, referencing such world leaders as Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine,Vladimir Putin of Russia and former President Joe Biden of the U.S.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Washington Post
2 hours ago
- Washington Post
Shutdowns of cellphone internet links sweep Russia, further limiting already-stifled net freedom
TALLINN, Estonia — A snappy tune by a blogger that mockingly laments his poor internet connection in the southern Russian city of Rostov-on-Don has gotten over a half-million views on Instagram in two weeks. 'How to say you're from Rostov without saying a word? Show one bar of cellphone service,' Pavel Osipyan raps while walking around the city, smartphone in hand. 'We have internet until 12 o'clock, and recently there's been no connection at all. No need to be angry, just get used to it already.'
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘Gutfeld!' Gangs Up on CBS Reporter for ‘PTSD' Diagnosis From Trump Rally Shooting: ‘Main Character Syndrome'
CBS correspondent Scott MacFarlane said he was 'diagnosed with PTSD in 48 hours' following his experience covering the Butler, Pennsylvania, rally where Donald Trump was nearly assassinated because his supporters turned on members of the press – and the 'Gutfeld!' gang couldn't contain their giggles. MacFarlane, who was onsite for the July 2024 incident, said on Chuck Todd's 'The Chuck Toddcast' that 'for those of us there, it was such horror because you saw an emerging America.' More from TheWrap 'Gutfeld!' Gangs Up on CBS Reporter for 'PTSD' Diagnosis From Trump Rally Shooting: 'Main Character Syndrome' | Video Trump Says He'll Sue Rupert Murdoch, NewsCorp and WSJ 'Shortly,' Orders Release of Epstein Testimony Stephen Colbert Says CBS Told Him of 'Late Show' Cancellation Just Last Night in Emotional Monologue: 'All Just Going Away' | Video Trump Contributed to Suggestive Jeffrey Epstein 50th Birthday Gift, WSJ Reports: 'We Have Certain Things in Common' 'I got put on trauma leave,' MacFarlane said. 'Not because of the shooting but because — you saw it in the eyes. The reaction of the people. They were coming for us. If he didn't jump up with his fist, they were going to come kill us. There is a subset — not everybody — dozens of people in the crowd to start confronting us, saying, 'You did this, this is your fault, you caused this, you killed him.' And they were going to beat us with their hands.' If MacFarlane was looking for sympathy, he wasn't going to find it on the Fox News late-night show. 'It shows you the level of main character syndrome,' said panelist and comedian Joe DeVito. 'That they were at a place, a man died, the guy running for president almost got his head blown off on live TV, and this guy's like, 'What about me? What about what I went through?'' DeVito said had he been there, he would've gotten PTSD, too – from the Secret Service detail. 'All these tiny little chubby ladies,' DeVito said. 'It was the most bizarre — I would have been freaked out by that. I didn't know the Secret Service would have two dozen tiny Melissa McCarthys climbing over to save your life.' Host Greg Gutfeld steered the conversation for a moment to over-labeling of mental conditions. 'This actually — it speaks to something everyone is kind of scared to talk about, which is the overdiagnosis of PTSD,' Gutfeld said. 'It used to be just for people that suffered war trauma or just violent trauma. But now it's like people say, 'I have PTSD, I had a terrible boss. I was at a rally.'' The Free Press editor Will Rahn then chimed in: 'Listen, I'm a little soft on this issue, I'm millennial. I was traumatized on the way here. So I feel for the guy. Listen, people snap, weird things happen. I don't know. Here's the thing. Going on that main character syndrome thing — there's this big reward for emoting, for going on and being like, 'Let me tell you about my feelings',' on Chuck Todd's podcast audience, about how I felt' … and it's like, I'm an editor. A reporter comes to me and is like, 'Let me tell you about my feelings,' and I'm like, 'No, the story is the president got his ear shot off — not how you felt, how people gave you dirty looks.'' Watch the entire exchange in the video above. The post 'Gutfeld!' Gangs Up on CBS Reporter for 'PTSD' Diagnosis From Trump Rally Shooting: 'Main Character Syndrome' | Video appeared first on TheWrap.


CNN
4 hours ago
- CNN
Ex-Philadelphia officer sentenced and immediately paroled after conviction in traffic stop shooting
A former Philadelphia police officer who shot and killed a motorist during a traffic stop was sentenced and granted parole Thursday by a judge, eliciting condemnations from the city's district attorney and the victim's family. Judge Glenn Bronson sentenced Mark Dial to 9 1/2 months in jail, and immediately granted Dial parole because he had already been jailed for 10 months following his arrest in 2023. A jury in May acquitted Dial, 29, of murder charges, and instead convicted him of voluntary manslaughter, reckless endangerment and possessing an instrument of crime in the fatal shooting of 27-year-old Eddie Irizarry. Brian McMonagle, Dial's lawyer, said the judge did the right thing for a 'dedicated public servant' who 'risked his life every day for perfect strangers.' District Attorney Larry Krasner said the judge went 'way below' sentencing guidelines in handing down a sentence that set Dial free. The low end of the standard range of sentencing guidelines for the conviction was 4 1/2 to nine years in prison, he said. Krasner declined to criticize the judge but said he was 'deeply disappointed with a verdict that I think makes people lose faith in the criminal justice system.' Zoraida Garcia, an aunt of Irizarry's, told reporters after the sentencing that if she had committed the crime, 'I would have been doing life in prison. But he's a cop, so he gets the OK.' Another aunt, Ana Cintron, said, 'my nephew's life doesn't matter at all.' In court, Bronson said the shooting was not 'a classic voluntary manslaughter case,' that Dial's conduct was 'demonstrably out of character' and that Dial was not a threat to the public, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported. He also said that Dial, after shooting Irizarry six times, rushed Irizarry to the hospital. 'I've never seen that happen in a voluntary manslaughter case,' he said. Dial's lawyers have insisted that the 2023 shooting was justified. They say Dial thought Irizarry had a gun when he approached Irizarry's car after officers spotted the car being driven erratically and followed it for several blocks before it turned the wrong way down a one-way street and stopped. Police body camera video of the shooting shows Dial getting out of a police SUV, striding over to Irizarry's car and firing his weapon six times at close range through the rolled-up driver's side window. The video shows Irizarry holding a seven-inch knife before he was shot. Another officer yelled 'knife' as they had approached the vehicle, according to the video, but Dial's attorneys disputed those assertions, saying the other officer yelled 'Gun!,' that the knife resembled a gun and that Dial had acted lawfully and in self-defense. Dial was released from custody in 2024 after prosecutors withdrew a first-degree murder charge.