The Sacred Book of the Werewolf by Victor Pelevin: Book Cover

    The Sacred Book of the Werewolf by Victor Pelevin, Andrew Bromfield (Translator)

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    (Hardcover)

    • Pub. Date: September 2008
    • 336pp
    • Sales Rank: 378,665

    Reader Rating: (3 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Originality" See All

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      • Overview
      • Editorial Reviews
      • Customer Reviews

      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: September 2008
      • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
      • Format: Hardcover, 336pp
      • Sales Rank: 378,665

      The Barnes & Noble Review

      On Labor Day weekend in 2008, on a New York Times front page otherwise preoccupied with the American presidential election and another Atlantic hurricane portending natural and moral cataclysm, an implausible, bleakly hilarious headline sneaked in just under the fold:

      "Russia's Lazy Collective Farms Are a Hot Capitalist Property," announced the article (which had nothing, at least on its surface, to do with the Georgian war). "[T]he business of buying and reforming collective farms is suddenly and improbably very profitable, attracting hedge fund managers, Russian oligarchs, Swedish portfolio investors and even a descendent of White Russian émigré nobility…. [T]he new business model rests on a belief that Russia's long, painful history of collectivization is destined to end in large corporate factory farms."

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      Synopsis

      The world's first Zen Buddhist paranormal romance-published to coincide with Halloween

      One of the most progressive writers at work today, Victor Pelevin's comic inventiveness has won him comparisons to Kafka, Calvino, and Gogol, and Time has described him as a "psychedelic Nabokov for the cyberage." In The Sacred Book of the Werewolf, a smash success in Russia and Pelevin's first novel in six years, paranormal meets transcendental with a splash of satire as A Hu-Li, a two-thousand-year-old shape-shifting werefox from ancient China meets her match in Alexander, a Wagner-addicted werewolf who's the key figure in Russia's Big Oil. Both a supernatural love story and an outrageously funny send-up of modern Russia, this stunning and ingenious work of the imagination is the sharpest novel to date from Russia's most gifted literary malcontent.

      The New York Times - Liesl Schillinger

      Racy, playful, thought-provoking and perverse, The Sacred Book of the Werewolf lends itself to both highlighting by the grad student's yellow marker and under-scoring by the thrill-seeker's red pen…It's a joy to read Pelevin's phantasmagoria so brilliantly translated by Andrew Bromfield, a crowning achievement of the pair's longtime association. Complex ideas are rendered simply and organically, never disturbing the narrative flow. Bromfield's English text is fleet and magical.

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      Biography

      Victor Pelevin is recognized as the leading Russian novelist of his generation and his award-winning works have been published in thirty-three countries. He shares his time between Moscow and the rest of the world.

      Customer Reviews

      • Reader Rating:
      • Ratings: 3Reviews: 2

      A Hard, but good readby MicheleLeesBookLove

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      January 10, 2009: This book is a long, hard read with lots of social and political commentary. But it's funny, A Hu-Li is a dynamic, interesting character and it has a beautiful ending, if you can last that long.

      What a riotby basiaaa

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      October 15, 2008: A very original and hysterical novel. So clever and so much fun! Couldn't put it down. Had some of the funniest scenes I've read in a while, especially when the protagonist works with her 'clients'. Great language too. Can't wait to read more Pelevin!