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Death and the Penguin by Kurkov Andrej
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Death and the Penguin

by Kurkov Andrej

Series: Penguin (book 1)

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Interacting with art is always subjective, and sometimes a particular reading experience will bring that home to me with a vengeance. I started Andrey Kurkov's Death and the Penguin during a time of personal uncertainty, when I was exhausted and unsure if my employers would be going out of business. Perhaps unsurprisingly, I found the first half of Kurkov's novel unengaging. The narration style seemed flat, numb: I couldn't "hear" the voice of the author, and the plot (concerning a journalist-cum-obituary-writer who, along with his de facto ward and his pet penguin, becomes embroiled in a mafia war) struck me as half-baked. Then, when I was halfway through the book, the uncertainty in my own life came to an end. And even though the news was bad - today my job ends and my company, like so many others in this economy, shuts its doors - I was so relieved to be out of the state of limbo that my primary immediate emotion was one of happiness. Funnily enough, Death and the Penguin was transformed, for me, along with my mood: suddenly the novel became dryly hilarious, a clever satire on the scattered, surreal atmosphere of post-Soviet Ukraine. The narrative voice was suddenly accessible. The plot, although odd, became intriguing.

I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that Kurkov's novel is not actually terrible for its first hundred pages and delightful for its second. Much more likely, it has a consistent texture and flavor throughout; had I been reading it during a more restful time, I probably would have enjoyed it in its entirety. It's amazing to me, though, just how stark the difference in my perception was between the first and second halves of this novel. I have to wonder: how many other books that have struck me as limp or offensive over the years have been casualties of my own state of mind? And likewise, how many of my favorite pieces of art only achieved that status because I happened to pick them up at exactly the right moment in my life?

Once my situation allowed me to appreciate Death and the Penguin, I noticed a lot to love. One of the things that struck me was the way in which reality and surreality exist easily side-by-side. I've seen Kurkov's work compared to the Soviet-banned classic The Master and Margarita, but from its opening pages Bulgakov's novel is unapologetic, fantastic allegory. In Death and the Penguin, on the other hand, the surreal elements are all grounded in some version of reality. It may seem bizarre, for example, that Viktor has a penguin for a pet. But in the wake of the Soviet collapse, zoos and other state-supported institutions lost their funding:

Misha had appeared chez Viktor a year before, when the zoo was giving away hungry animals to anyone able to feed them. Viktor had gone along and returned with a king penguin. Abandoned by his girlfriend the week before, he had been feeling lonely. But Misha had brought his own kind of loneliness, and the result was now two complementary lonelinesses, creating an impression more of interdependence than of amity.

I don't know whether zoos actually did give away animals at the time, but this detail is richly evocative of the real yet surreal atmosphere of post-Soviet chaos. Formerly reliable institutions are either gutted or transformed; nothing is what it used to be; nothing is what it seems. Normally I prefer my surreality to be sinister and unexplained, but in the case of Death and the Penguin, the reality of post-Soviet Ukraine needs little embellishment: it's surreal enough on its own.

Something was wrong with this life, he thought, walking with downcast eyes. Or life itself had changed, and was as it used to be - simple, comprehensible - only on the outside. Inside, it was as if the mechanism was broken, and now there was no knowing what to expect of a familiar object - be it a loaf of Ukrainian bread or a street pay telephone. Beneath every surface, inside every tree, every person, lurked an invisible alien something. The seeming reality of everything was only a relic of childhood.

I don't know whether the wordplay exists in the original Russian, but the phrase "familiar objects" is apt. The traditional nuclear family is one of the primary targets of the transforming chaos that pervades Kurkov's work. Viktor stumbles into a domestic situation superficially resembling the traditional one: a youngish couple living with their little daughter and family pet (albeit a penguin rather than a dog). But, as Viktor points out, nothing is as it seems. Sonya, his seeming daughter, is actually the child of a mafioso who drops her on Viktor's doorstep unceremoniously and then disappears for good. Nina, his ostensible wife or girlfriend, is a nanny Viktor has hired for Sonya. And, despite his growing practical involvement with woman and girl, and his contemplation of purchasing a summer home with Nina, his emotions never become invested in these relationships. In one scene, he surprises himself by thinking that "perhaps he should try to grow fond of Nina and Sonya." In Viktor's world, emotional attachment seems not to grow organically out of everyday life - or rather, attachments do form, but not with the people one would normally expect.

And yet, this comfortable if dispassionate life is enough to pacify Viktor, to convince him to accept the growing danger in which his shady employment - writing damning obituaries on notable people just before they die - is placing him. Whereas the traditional hero of a mystery novel feels compelled to get to the bottom of whatever's going on, Viktor is often overcome by lassitude in the face of unfathomable dangers:

Was it worth trying to discover what was going on? Worth risking comfort - curious though it might be - and peace of mind? He would still have to write obelisks, and still have to be needed in order to stay alive.

As un-glamorous as this attitude is, I have to admit I can really relate to it. In such a chaotic, nonsensical world, it seems outlandish to suppose that Viktor should risk his temporary shelter (under the wing of who-knows-what questionable characters) and bring on his own death sooner than anticipated, just to ascertain the exact workings of the crimes in which he has unwittingly become involved. A kind of provisional, superficial comfort is the best these characters can reasonably expect. Despite everything, though, Viktor still struggles with his basic human instincts of curiosity and self-preservation. He can't dismiss them entirely, and in that small way, I found the novel to be a hopeful one, in addition to its dark hilarity and dystopian charm.
1 vote emily_morine | Jun 12, 2009 |
Disappointing.

This book is exactly what it says on the cover - 'deadpan'.
Whilst it gave an uncomfortable, but accurate, depiction of life in Kiev, Ukraine, it was not an amusing or particularly enjoyable read.
Only the penguin was endearing.

The book seemed to lack substance; there was no detail about how the penguin had reacted when it first left the zoo, 4 yr old Sonya was completely unpeturbed when abandoned by her father with a stranger, the short term hiding of characters for their safety seemed too brief to be believable etc etc etc.

I met the author at a recent Literary Festival and found him entertaining, with interesting views on censorship in the Eastern Block.
I am disappointed that I didn't enjoy his book and can't give it 5 stars.

Your Tags: Ukraine ( )
2 vote DubaiReader | May 31, 2009 |
For some reason, this book caught my eye ages ago, on a table in Barnes and Noble, and I picked it up and knew it would be a Great Book. Three years later, I tucked it into a suitcase and read it in one sitting on the train and while I certainly think it has incredible elements to it, the hype of having it tucked away for a few years meant that I had that sense of wanting something a bit more... but only upon initially closing the book. I don't necessarily read a great deal of existentialist literature, but I quite enjoyed this... particularly the writing style and the characters, and further reflection upon it only seems to improve the work.

The basic plot is this: Viktor is a semi-aspiring writer (who lacks ambition and inspiration) living in post-Soviet Kiev. His only true companion is his pet penguin, Misha. Why does he keep a penguin as a pet? Well, when the zoo could no longer afford to feed some of its animals, it gave them away to those who could (which is a true story). Viktor, having just broken up with his girlfriend, was a bit lonely, and so he took on Misha, and King Penguin. Now, this isn't a story with a talking penguin, so don't think we've gone there. No, Misha simply waddles around the apartment, a bit depressed and lost, so he and Viktor are somewhat alike as we start out in this novel. But then Viktor gets a job writing obituaries - obelisks as the book calls them - for those VIPs in their society who have not yet died, the idea being that these tributes will be on hand when they do. Of course, things aren't always what they seem and just when Viktor appears to find his life settling into something resembling the stereotypical dream of job and family, he discovers that his obelisks are being used as a kind of hit list.

I had tried to get this into my book club for discussion, but no one seemed terribly enthused, which leaves me to muddle through the questions it raises on my own. Naturally, my favorite parts of the novel are with Misha, who became so vivid in my imagination as he moved through the apartment and looked at Viktor with sad eyes. Viktor himself is an interesting character, vacillating between paranoid despair and an ignorant (but actively opting to be ignorant) and childlike contentment. Things tend to fall into his lap (the job, another man's daughter for Viktor to raise, a relationship with the girl's nanny) and he tends to simply accept them, make the most of things, and not question them. One cannot help but ask how much one tends to accept in his/her own life in a similar way as to Viktor... how much benefits us in a "no questions asked" kind of way, even if ours must certainly be a bit different. (When were you last paid $1000 for showing up at a funeral with a penguin?) But the only creature that Viktor seems to have a real connection with is Misha, who came about as a result of an active choice to take on a penguin from the zoo... though perhaps unsurprising since Misha is used as a mirror for Viktor himself throughout the story.

If I knew more about post-Soviet Ukraine, I'm sure I could have gleaned more from the relationship between the media, the government, and the mafia -- or at least beyond the obvious manipulations of them all upon each other. I mean, I was prepared for the drinking and the routine murder from simple historical stereotypes of this period of time. What I can determine is that there's certainly something to be said about entrusting your fate to the mafia rather than the government (which is perhaps why Kurkov's work was banned in Russia), as the mafia seems more capable of caring for you. It seems to make no difference which camp you're in, as life is just as precarious either way, but at least the mafia seems to have the funds capable of caring for your body if not your conscience. Some reviews have called the prose "cold", but I imagine it's simply apt as a voice representative of the Ukraine and its people. An absurdist humor, a resignation to certain goings-on in life, an emphasis on how it's better not to know too much...

No matter what, if I can somehow find Kurkov's other works, I'll certainly be quicker about reading those than I was this one. And you should waste no time in discovering this gem for yourself. ( )
2 vote alana_leigh | Apr 26, 2009 |
A fascinating read that won't do much for Ukrainian tourism. A country where no one can live unless anaesthetised by a constant drip of vodka from morning to night. Sometimes funny, always sad but my abiding memory of the story will always be the wise sad penguin Misha. He watches on with a calm dignity almost like an old God in disguise dissapointed and saddened by the hoplessness of his creation... ( )
  Weirdbeard | Apr 24, 2009 |
Ukrainian tragico-comedy, a journalist adopts a penguin from the zoo and starts writing obituaries for politicians who are still alive. Once the obituary is written, the politicians end up dead - coincidence? Or has the writer served as a tool for the local mafia's murders? This is just the start of the hero's adventures... ( )
  soniaandree | Feb 25, 2009 |
This whimsical novel features a short story author turned obituarist. During the course of his employment, during which he is to write the future obituaries of notable people, he finds that the subjects of his "obelisk jobs" have a tendency to turn up dead. It is an interesting glimpse into both a dreary occupation and life in post-Soviet Union Ukraine. Also there is a mono-polaric depressive penguin called, "Misha" who lives with our ill-fated hero and is the object of most of his affection; and while Misha never speaks, his presence and influence is felt throughout the story proving there are far too few penguins in literature. ( )
1 vote themockturtle | Jan 27, 2009 |
Although this book is often described as a black comedy I did not find it very funny. It is a slightly surreal story in which a failed writer who lives with a penguin is employed to write obituaries. Unwillingly, he gets involved with some dubious characters, one of which leaves him in charge of his four year old daughter. The story has elements of midlife crisis. The relationship between the writer, the penguin and the little girl is touching without being sentimental. The picture of post-soviet Ukraine is quite puzzling. ( )
  alalba | Jan 24, 2009 |
What the book is about you can read elsewhere, and the story is told in a straighforward way, but what makes this book special an wortwhile reading is the atmosphere the writer manages to create. Slightly absurd, sinister at times, and this combinded with Victor's simple everyday life, eventhough he lives with a penguin, makes it an unforgetable read.
1 vote sprutle | Sep 1, 2008 |
Fantastic, funny, clever, strange and dark, concise - everything I look for in a book. ( )
1 vote Tifi | Aug 26, 2008 |
Great short novel. Just a bit surreal. Deals with a writer who gains employment writing speculative obits for a newspaper, and it turns out that he is being manipulated as part of a russian power struggle. ( )
2 vote jaygheiser | Jul 23, 2008 |
A struggling author called Viktor becomes the proud owner of a depressive king penguin called Misha when the zoo in Kiev gives away the animals it can no longer afford to feed. A year later, he takes what seems initially like a simple job writing obituaries ahead of need for a Kiev newspaper, and finds himself and his penguin entangled in some rather sinister goings on.

This black comedy set in the post-communist Ukraine is a short tale full of humour and pathos. I loved the thought of Misha the penguin being asked to attend funerals to add a bit of class! ( )
1 vote isabelx | Jun 13, 2008 |
What a bizarre little book! It's about a writer who is living with a penguin and somehow also ends up looking after a 6 year old girl as well. It put so many funny images in my mind, for instance - a penguin, on a bus, on the way to attend a funeral?! Packed with intrigue and humour, I couldn't put this down until I'd finished it. ( )
3 vote kehs | Mar 23, 2008 |
Reading the other reviews, everyone else seems to love the ultra deadpan style.

Too dry for me. ( )
  Rhysickle | Dec 31, 2007 |
A satire on life in post-communist Ukraine, political assassination is rife, gangsters and oligarchs run the country, hospitals have no drugs and everything is in decay. Viktor is a forty year old unsuccessful writer, who picks up an unusual commission - to write obituaries for people who are still living. He is the archetypal good man who turns a blind eye to evil, because turning a blind eye is the only way to get by. People start to die and his passivity leads him into ever murkier areas, testing his powers of denial to the limits. Not being able to say no also results in him acquiring a family consisting of a depressed penguin, the four year old daughter of a gangster, and a 17 year old nanny/mistress.

I really enjoyed this book, the detachment of its protagonist and cool measured description of an increasingly mad world really hooked me, and it's very funny, too. ( )
  Greatrakes | Sep 4, 2007 |
Bitter-sweet satire as a writer gets caught up with the deadly struggles of the political-business elites as he tries to make sense of a empty personal life. This starting with misha the penguin soon becomes increasingly full and complicated as he acquires friends a girl friend, a child. Full of memorable characters and images. More liteweight then expected but avoids a Hollywood endng yet strangely unresolved- sequels I fear await ( )
  ablueidol | Aug 26, 2007 |
One of the most satisfying, humorous and tender books you are ever likely to read, ‘Death and the Penguin’ is a stunning tale of loneliness tinged with the absurd.

The relationship between Victor and his penguin Misha is perfectly drawn, and the plot unravels at a remarkable pace. Put simply, this is a wonderful book. ( )
  glaughlan | Jul 24, 2007 |
A meditation on an empty life, made less solitary by an odd job: writing obituaries for people who haven't yet died. As the job goes on, it seems to fill the empty life with characters in almost-normal relationships with the protagonist (Viktor). The job makes him leave town, so he acquires a "friend" so that there's someone to take care of his penguin while he's gone. A referral from the job results in another "friend", and later a "daughter" who necessitates a "wife".

But all of the relationships are tenuous. Fortune has nudged these people together, but there's no reason for them to stay together except a desire for normalcy or a strange sense of duty. Viktor never really feels more towards them than he feels towards his penguin, who is aloof and seems to mostly share Viktor's space rather than being an actual companion.

Thoughtful. Melancholy. Quick read. ( )
  aneel | May 10, 2007 |
Death and the Penguin is a gripping novel about a man named Victor and his adopted pet penguin Misha. Aspiring author Victor is hired by a post-soviet, mob-owned newspaper to write obituaries for the undead. Eventually, as each obituary nears publication, the subject of each obituary dies. Kurkov takes us on a wild chase of reality amidst absurdity. . . Or is it absurdity amidst reality?. . . Or are they one and the same? As I see it, this is the point of the novel--that with time people will embrace absurdity as normality. ( )
  guanarteme | Apr 14, 2007 |
An odd little story - black humor, sadness, mystery, suspense, and a penguin. I was a bit disappointed in the ending, but I understand there's a follow-up novel. I'll have to get it to see what happens to Viktor. And to Misha too, of course. ( )
  bookem | Mar 27, 2007 |
Contains Misha, undoubtedly the greatest penguin in the whole of world literature! Misha's owner, throughout the Kafkaesque absurdity that ensues from his taking up a job as an orbituary-writer, even refers to the sinister stranger who commissions him - also called Misha - as 'Misha-non-penguin', to make sure everyone knows who he's talking about. This is a lovely book, very funny in that peculiarly Russian way of being heartbreakingly sad at the same time. Well worth a look. ( )
  othersam | Jan 5, 2007 |
Kurkov’s understated humour and perfect, deadpan style makes this quirky little story, full of quirky characters, a gem. Death and the Penguin is the nectar of booklovers and Misha, a penguin rescued from a struggling zoo, is one of the most animated, engaging and touching characters in contemporary fiction. But there’s more to Kurkov’s writing than a sideways laugh at human foibles. Death of Penguin shows many pictures of loneliness and human isolation. Viktor is an aspiring writer but lacks the energy to follow his dreams and, by settling to bread today and giving up on the idea of jam tomorrow, finds himself drawn into a mafiaesque world of crime and assassination in the chill starkness of post-Soviet Kiev. Misha comes to live with him when the local zoo can no longer afford to feed him. Both are lonely, Viktor isolated from human society and Misha alone amid it. Yet it is Misha who seems able to make strong relationship – first with Sonia, a little girl who comes to live with Viktor when her father is swept away into oblivion by his life of crime and then with the reader: who cannot fail to adore the quite, reliable, predictable animal, or to delight in his pleasure in fish and cold bathes, or sorrow over his inability to adjust to life in a climate so much warmer than his native land.

Here too is a stark, if one-sided, portrayal, of life in the former Soviet state of Ukraine. And it’s not a nice life. It’s cold, it’s hard and seemingly pointless. Deprived of the structure of the state, each seems to struggle to embrace with vigour the concept of democratic freedom. What Death of a Penguin amounts to is a strong indictment of a political reform which has left a population, bereft of communism community, without any societal fabric at all: without hope, without security and unable to realise the promise of liberty. This book is very funny. It’s very sad. And it’s very, very good. ( )
  Rivercassini | Dec 3, 2006 |
Sympatisk berättelse om journalisten Viktor och hans depressiva pingvin i maffians Kiev. ( )
  moia | May 7, 2006 |
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