<p>"Sorokin, global literature's postmodern provocateur, is both a savage and satirist and a consummate showman." <b>âDustin Illingworth, <i>The New York Times Book Review</i></b></p>
<p>"[Sorokin's] disorienting prose forces the mind to reactâto focus, to sharpenâand urges us to be on guard against revered forms and the literary conventions of authority." <b>â<i>Harper's</i></b></p>
<p>"Sorokin is widely regarded as one of Russia's most inventive writers." <b>â<i>The New York Times</i></b></p><p>"An explosive and taboo-busting collection... Though not for the faint of heart, Sorokin's singular vision demands attention."Â <b>â<i>Publishers Weekly</i>, starred review</b></p>
<p>"For American readers today, already getting sci-fi shell-shocked by war news, political crime news, medical news, ... this helps spotlight (without a narrator and without stage directions), how we read, how we avoid, how we survive." <b>âBruce Andrews</b></p>
<p>"Socialist Realism has been tried and found guilty. Guilty of annoying edification, stifling clichĂŠs, propagandistic lies voiced by its stock characters, and fear of the body in all its messy manifestations. InâŻ<i>Dispatches from the District Committee</i>, Vladimir Sorokin acts as its executioner. Each short story is a Grand Guignol performance, in which Soviet style is condemned to a gruesome death. Don't feel sorry for Socialist Realism; just lean back and enjoy its just deserts in Max Lawton's masterful translation." <b>â<i>The Untranslated</i></b></p>
<p>âSorokin's books are like entering a crazy nightmare, and I mean that as a compliment ... He was able to find the right vocabulary with which to articulate the truth." <b>âGary Shteyngart</b></p>
<p>"Sorokinâs sudden exposure is long overdue as he is probably both the most acclaimed and the most controversial author in Russia today, hailed by critics as a âliving classicâ even as his subject matter takes the tradition of Russian grotesque into areas Gogol or even the Stalin-era absurdist Daniil Kharms never dared venture." <b>âDaniel Kalder, <i>Publishing Perspectives</i></b></p>