Author:Andrey Kurkov,Amanda Love Darragh

'Good-hearted and brutal at the same time, The Milkman in the Night is a complex, unsettling mixture of bleakness and warmth' Sunday Times
Read this eccentric epic from the author of cult classic Death and the Penguin
Semyon is disturbed. He has woken up in the living room with blood on his shirt, an angry wife and no idea where he was the night before. When this happens several mornings in a row, he realises he needs to investigate.
After his friend Volodka follows him one night, they discover he's meeting a tall, blonde woman and accompanying her to her apartment. In the daytime he doesn't know this woman or where her apartment is and, odder yet, someone is watching Volodka watching Semyon.
Meanwhile, there are some strange goings-on in Kyiv - an unemployed sniffer-dog handler makes a dangerous discovery, a single mother is providing breast milk for an unusual recipient and a vengeful cat is on the loose...
A glorious, epic, eccentric and often hilarious satire, heavily tinged with Russian melancholy
—— Kate Saunders , The TimesThere is much to enjoy in this book. Kurkov works in the tradition of Nikolai Gogol and Mikhail Bulgakov, blending folkloric characters, magical realism and political satire to reveal a society riddled with greed, stupidity and corruption
—— Marina Lewycka , Financial TimesGood-hearted and brutal at the same time, The Milkman in the Night is a complex, unsettling mixture of bleakness and warmth
—— Sunday TimesKurkov is hugely talented
—— Time OutThis book is a joyride... Kurkov has a rollercoaster of fun between zig and zag. He defies the reader not to join him
—— ScotsmanSet in post-Orange Revolution Kiev, Kurkov's narrative is a meditation on the uneasy dreams of a troubled cultural psyche
—— Times Literary SupplementBlackly surreal... Kurkov has an artisan's eye for quirky detail but dispatches it with terse Eastern pessimism. Here, he weaves a low-key epic in which a series of characters - a single mother, a sniffer-dog handler, a security guard, a politician, a man having an affair in his sleep, a widow, two cats and a plastinated corpse - become embroiled in a bizarre conspiracy involving a drug that sharpens people's sense of justice and a very dodgy milking operation. It sounds fanciful but Kurkov never gets too caught up in this world, describing it with a pragmatic economy and powerful clarity
—— Andrzej Lukowski , MetroKurkov's imagination kicks into high gear and turns Kiev into an absurdist playground. The result is a whimsical, skewed vision which can be, by turns, delightful and discomforting
—— HeraldKurkov entices us along all the fault-lines of his bizarre world, where a young man sleepwalks through a double life and a widow notices her embalmed husband has fresh dirt on his unworn shoes
—— Jane Jakeman , IndependentDrugs, milk and a brace of cats pop up in a murky epic from Ukraine's master of the surreal conspiracy thriller
—— MetroThe separate storylines... twine into a bizarre quasi-murder mystery, featuring anti-fear medicine, human milk used as youth serum, corpse embalming, a cat that comes back from the dead and shady government practices. Ukranian author Andrey Kurkov's direct, unfussy narration is drenched in post-soviet pessimism and alcohol... readers trying to second-guess future twists will be astonished
—— Manchester Evening Newsan unexpected gem and quite possibly the best novel of the year
—— Northern EchoOutstanding and moving
—— The Irish TimesThe most amazing book . . . The author handled the character wonderfully.
—— Young Writerheartwarming
—— The Irish TimesA heart-warming story about a boy struggling to communicate with the world
—— The Good Book GuideAn intriguing, enlightening,and totally compelling read with surely the most unlikely hero in young people's literature
—— Rosalind Kerven , Northern EchoLaugh-out-loud funny
—— TimeOut...original, kind, disturbing and profoundly moving.
—— The GuardianA stroke of genius, as the advantages of having a naive, literal-minded boy in the driving seat are manifold...we do learn what it might fe el like to have Asperger's Syndrome.
—— David Newnham, T.E.S.A truly original work of fiction . . .a unique tale
—— York Evening Pressexcellent
—— Claire Allfree , Metro MidlandsA wonderful first person narrative of a boy with Asperger;s Syndrome; funny, sad and extraordinarily original
—— Philip Ardagh , The GuardianThe highlight of the year
—— John Malam , Manchester Evening NewsThis is the magazine of the National Autistic Society: the review is written by someone with Asperger's Syndrome. "This book is a good murder mystery story but a better description of how th mind of a different person with some kind of special need looks upon how things work and come about.
—— CommunicationThis startlingly original story . . . Has surprised everyone-not least the author.The book is funny, gripping, sad and unstintingly entertaining.
—— The AgeSo if you're interested in solving mysteries and want to learn about autism in children, you'll love this book
—— Carlisle News and StarA triumph from first page to last . . . Haddon's prose is empathetic and you cannot help but be drawn into young Christpher's world
—— Dundee Evening Telegraph and PostThis is a unique book written from the perspective of a unique character . . . It is very easy to read and would satisfy anyone from eight to 88
—— The TeacherI found this book highly entertaining and enthralling though it was a bit sad at times.
—— Books for Keeps






