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Jimi Hendrix live in Lemberg
Im Warenkorb

Published by Diogenes as Jimi Hendrix live in Lemberg
Original Title: Lwowskaja gastrol Jimi Hendrixa
In Lviv, a multi-ethnic town in Galicia, strange things are happening. And it’s not to do with the aged hippies who are gathering around a mysterious grave in the cemetery by night. Nor about the former KGB-man who wants to apologise to the people he spied on. And nor is it about the fact that a young woman with an allergy to money is working in the ›bureau de change‹. And it’s certainly not about the ancient Opel Vectra racing at full speed over the cobblestones to cure patients with kidney stones. No, in Lviv, far stranger things are happening. Seagulls are circling in the sky, the air smells salty: it seems as though the town, situated far inland in the West of the Ukraine, is being haunted by the sea ... In Andrej Kurkow’s Lviv, miracles can happen in every little side street and on every street corner. And that’s all down to the power of love, the boundless imagination of a writer – and the immortal music of Jimi Hendrix.

General Fiction
416 pages (print edition)

978-3-257-60436-8

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

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»An ironic lightness of touch, black humour and an intuitive grasp of the pragmatism of ordinary people forced to live through difficult times – these have always been the hallmarks of Andrej Kurkow’s prose.«

Gregor Ziolkowski / Deutschlandradio Kultur, Berlin

»Andrej Kurkow's latest coup is vodka-based magic realism, peopled with true Kurkowian protagonists - bizarre and slightly melancholic.«

Oliver Jungen / Cicero - Literaturen, Berlin

»Besides that, the architecture of the novel comes with echos of the post-modernism that is en vogue in Russian language literature today, peppered with remembrances of atmospheres of Bulgakov and The Master and Margarita.«

Wlodek Goldkorn / La Repubblica, Turin

»An ironic lightness of touch, black humour and an intuitive grasp of the pragmatism of ordinary people forced to live through difficult times – these have always been the hallmarks of Andrej Kurkow’s prose.«

Gregor Ziolkowski / Deutschlandradio Kultur, Berlin

»Andrej Kurkow's latest coup is vodka-based magic realism, peopled with true Kurkowian protagonists - bizarre and slightly melancholic.«

Oliver Jungen / Cicero - Literaturen, Berlin

»Besides that, the architecture of the novel comes with echos of the post-modernism that is en vogue in Russian language literature today, peppered with remembrances of atmospheres of Bulgakov and The Master and Margarita.«

Wlodek Goldkorn / La Repubblica, Turin
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