Penguin Lost

Penguin Lost is a novel by Andrey Kurkov. Originally published in 2005 in Russian (as Закон улитки, English: The Snail Law), it was translated and published in English in 2010. It is the sequel to the author's novel Death and the Penguin.

Penguin Lost
First edition
AuthorAndrey Kurkov
TranslatorGeorge Bird
CountryUkraine
LanguageRussian
GenreSatire, Surrealism
PublisherVintage
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages256 pp
ISBN978-0-09-946169-2
Preceded byDeath and the Penguin 

Summary

The novel follows the life of a writer, Viktor Alekseyevich Zolotaryov, in a struggling post-Soviet society. Fleeing from the mafia to the Faraday Station in Antarctica, Viktor passes some time in a polar research station, before returning to Kyiv with a new identity. Back in Ukraine and needing a job, he starts work on the election campaign for a Mafia boss. In return he is given information as to the whereabouts of Misha, his pet penguin, which is said to be in a zoo in Chechnya. Thus begins another journey, this time across the former Soviet Union, in pursuit of his beloved pet.

The original Russian-language title of the book, The Snail Law, refers to the Mafia boss' saying that every person should have his or her own shell (that is, a protecting mob group) and he / she is alive only as long as the "shell" is not lost.

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