The main character of Cocaine, the hallucinatory new novel by Aleksandr Skorobogatov, is trying to make the world a better place through words, but also with the help of a hammer and a gigantic nail. Why? Because, according to Dostojevski, he has to. And also because this world of ours is becoming all too frightening.
Recently abandoned by the love of his life, our protagonist passes his days wandering through the streets of Moscow with nothing but his imagination to keep him going. He fantasises about epic battles in pubs, assigns himself the hero or villain in murder cases, and suddenly receives an invitation to travel to Stockholm: he has won the Nobel Peace Prize.
An enigmatic Nobel Prize committee awaits him – the dead are resurrected and on top of that he rediscovers his former love. This can’t be true the reader keeps thinking ut the author, being the creator of his characters, can do with them as he pleases. And so an intriguing cat-and-mouse game between author, protagonist, and reader begins.
Cocaine is a no-holds-barred celebration of the seemingly limitless possibilities of the human imagination. It is a literary rollercoaster ride in the very best Russian tradition.