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Pinguine frieren nicht
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Penguin Lost

Published by Diogenes as Pinguine frieren nicht
Original Title: Zakon Ulitki

Victor cannot stand life at the Antarctic polar station, where he has fled to escape the mafia, much longer. He can find no peace. The dying banker, a fellow fugitive to the land of eternal ice, has entrusted Victor with his will. And he is preoccupied by thoughts of the debt he owes to the penguin Misha. Victor flies back to Moscow, to little Sonja and her nanny, whose wages Victor pays and with whom he once had a relationship. But Victor's key no longer fits the lock of his house and, as Sonja confides in him, there is now ›another uncle‹ in his bed. Victor is offered temporary lodgings – and more besides – by the banker's widow, to whom he delivers the will. But the good life cannot deter Victor from his search for Misha. In the clinic where Misha was recently operated upon, they know only that the penguin was collected by two men in black suits. Victor has a feeling that something is awry. At the cemetery where the mafia bury their ›family‹, Victor is on the lookout for funeral processions, hoping to find Misha – and discovers a promising lead…


General Fiction
544 pages
2003

978-3-257-23473-2

World rights are handled by Diogenes
(except Russian and Ukrainian)

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»Penguin Misha may be just a minor character – but what a character he is!«
Der Spiegel, Hamburg
»As wonderfully light and sad as life itself.«
Die Welt, Berlin
»Andrey Kurkov is a master of grotesque humour.«
Brigitte, Hamburg
»With Kurkov, one is guaranteed entertainment of the highest order.«
Wiener Zeitung

»Delicious… when Viktor finally finds Misha it is as if Woody Allen had gone to meet Kurtz.«

The Spectator, London

»A striking portrait of post-Soviet isolation…. In this bleak moral landscape Kurkov manages to find ample refuge for his dark humor.«

The New York Times
»Penguin Misha may be just a minor character – but what a character he is!«
Der Spiegel, Hamburg
»As wonderfully light and sad as life itself.«
Die Welt, Berlin
»Andrey Kurkov is a master of grotesque humour.«
Brigitte, Hamburg
»With Kurkov, one is guaranteed entertainment of the highest order.«
Wiener Zeitung

»Delicious… when Viktor finally finds Misha it is as if Woody Allen had gone to meet Kurtz.«

The Spectator, London

»A striking portrait of post-Soviet isolation…. In this bleak moral landscape Kurkov manages to find ample refuge for his dark humor.«

The New York Times
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