The Case of the General's Thumb

by Andrey Kurkov

Paperback, 2004

Status

Available

Call number

891.7344

Publication

Vintage (2004), Edition: New edition, Paperback, 192 pages

Description

Fiction. Mystery. HTML:John Le Carré meets Mikhail Bulgakov in this international crime thriller by the author of the acclaimed Death and the Penguin The corpse of a distinguished general is found attached to an advertising balloon�??and minus his thumb. Police Lieutenant Viktor Slutsky is sent in to investigate. So, too, is KGB officer Nik Tsensky. They begin their investigations unbeknownst to each other, but quickly find themselves mystified about developments caused by the other. Thus begins a comedy of very dangerous errors as the two crisscross Europe, Russia, and the Ukraine, catalysts in a bizarre battle between the Russian and Ukrainian secret services. What ensues is simultaneously hilarious, tragic, and suspenseful, with a fascinating cast of characters who would seem absurd if they weren't so compelling: a larger-than-life hitman, a deaf-and-dumb blonde, and a turtle. Then there's the gun that shoots backwards... And as the two faithful investigators find themselves to be pawns in a story of post-Soviet collapse, it becomes�??as usual in the work of this modern Russian master�??an inspiring tale of resilience against the dark forces… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member defrog
From the same Ukrainian writer who brought you Death And The Penguin and A Matter Of Death And Life, both of which I liked a lot. This one is more of a spy novel with the prize being KGB gold, but it comes with the usual concise prose, quirky characters and Ukrainian politics Kurkov puts in his
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other novels. That said, this one’s not quite as good as the other two, but still pretty enjoyable.
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LibraryThing member libellous
Along with contempraries like Viktor Pelevin, Kurkov has dragged Eastern European fiction into the 21st century. Beautifully written and translated, The Case of the General's Thumb represents a departure from the "penguin" series, but in common with them, sees the main character unintentionally
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embroiled in the workings of the KGB/FSB, Russian Mafia and general criminal underworld of Ukraine and Russia.

More an exploration of how the absurdity of post-communist Ukraine has come to resemble the absurdism of Gogol and his contemporaries than a spy novel, it remains accessible and extremely enjoyable. If you liked Death and the Penguin, make this your next stop.
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LibraryThing member HeikeM
It is just another Andrey Kurkov – wild, fast, mad, thrilling. It is a spy novel that takes us racing through Russia and other European countries, it is two stories that are told side by side and slowly getting closer until they merge. The characters are wonderfully quirky, it is absurd and funny
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and if you like Kurkov as I do it does not disappoint.
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LibraryThing member ten_floors_up
I Somehow found this less engaging than other books by Kurkov that I've read - but even a Kurkov novel ever-so-slightly off the boil remains entertaining and quite unique in approach.

Language

Original publication date

1999

Physical description

192 p.; 7.64 inches

ISBN

0099455250 / 9780099455257
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