The Sacred Book of the Werewolf, Victor Pelevin Translated by Andrew Bromfield
The Sacred Book of the Werewolf, Victor Pelevin Translated by Andrew Bromfield
1 Rating(s)
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The Sacred Book of the Werewolf

Author: Victor Pelevin; Translated by Andrew Bromfield

Narrator: Cassandra Campbell

Unabridged: 12 hr

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 09/04/2008

Categories: Fiction


Synopsis

In Pelevins sharpest, most accessible, and most engrossing novel to date, A. Huli, a fifteenyearold contemporary Moscow prostitute, is in truth a twothousandyearold werefox. After the death of a client, she is forced to work via ads placed on the internet. Eventually, she comes to the attention of Alexander, a Russian intelligence officer who, unbeknownst to her, is a werewolf. They fall in love and, many plot twists later, we discover that The Sacred Book of the Werewolf is A. Hulis memoir.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Glenn on December 09, 2018

Even if you don't ordinarily read science-fiction or novels with werewolves, you will still enjoy The Sacred Book of the Werewolf since Victor Pelevin grounds his novel in a fund of everyday reality and tells his tale in easy-to-follow linear narrative. True, the narrator is a two thousand year old......more

Goodreads review by Greg on August 22, 2010

Victor Pelevin has been one of those writers that has been calling out to me for years now. I see his books at work, and some of them I think, "I should buy this someday", and others look like books that would irritate me. And over the years the idea that his books will irritate me had been winning......more

Goodreads review by Becca on January 27, 2009

Not sure how a book about a werefox prostitute in post-Soviet Russia manages to be boring, but this novel managed to do just that. Color me seriously disappointed.......more

Goodreads review by Michael on October 06, 2008

Viktor Pelevin has given us a delightful critique of modern Russia inside a love story, which is inside a fairy tale, which is inside a meditation on the Tao, or perhaps it is the meditation on the Tao that is inside the fairy tale, which is inside the love story contained in a critique of modern Ru......more

Goodreads review by Tim on January 15, 2024

Two cautions. Waterstones put this on their horror shelf - it isn't a horror novel and it adds nothing consequential to the werewolf genre. It might just slip into the dark fantasy category but only at a stretch. It should sit nowhere else but under general fiction. The second is the claim on the dus......more