Victor Erofeyev est un écrivain dont l'œuvre explore les aspects les plus sombres de la psyché humaine et de la société. Sa prose aborde fréquemment des thèmes tels que le sexe, la violence et la mort à travers une esthétique grotesque, remettant en question les notions littéraires conventionnelles. Influencé par une exposition précoce à des œuvres interdites et par des recherches philosophiques, Erofeyev a formulé des manifestes artistiques radicaux et a relié la littérature russe aux courants philosophiques européens. Son écriture, souvent considérée comme dissidente et controversée, vise à interroger les normes sociales et offre une perspective provocatrice sur la réalité.
Russkij sostoit iz "nichego," kotoroe vklyuchaet v sebya "vsyo." Russkij schitaet, chto emu nichego ne prinadlezhit. Russkij schitaet, chto emu prinadlezhit ves' mir. Pri vneshnej myagkosti i pevuchesti Rossii, pri ee bab'em oblichij, lyubvi k kefiru, v etoj strane zhivet naselenie s chudovischnym appetitom. Vchera - vsyo, segodnya - nichego, nazavtra - snova vsyo.
O miłości napisano tyle głupot, że można zaryzykować stwierdzenie, że w ogóle nic nie napisano. Niewykluczone, że miłość do kobiety to w istocie wydana reszta, drobne, które zostają mężczyźnie w dłoni po jego miłości do Boga, ale w obliczu powszechnie znanego zaniku uczuć religijnych wysoki kurs nominalny miłości rozmienia się dziś powszechnie na uczucie do płci (w zasadzie) odmiennej.
The Russian beauty is Irina Tarakanova. She is beautiful, bisexual, and utterly knowing. She is also a heroine as touchingly human as Emma Bovary and Molly Bloom, and the narrator of this astonishing and sophisticated novel. Abandoning her dull provincial life for Moscow, Irina embarks on a spectacular horizontal career encompassing all layers of Moscow society: Western diplomats, nationalist dissidents, American Journalists, KGB officers. It is not until she meets the older married Leonardik (who once "shook hands with Stalin") that she finds her match. But their relationship is doomed, and neither subsequent lovers, nor memories of her beloved lesbian friend, Ksyusha, can console her. Reflecting on her own and Russia's tragic destiny, Irina decides that it is only through her own self-sacrifice that the motherland that has condemned her can be saved... Combining satire and brutal realism, eroticism and humor, Victor Erofeyev paints an unsparing picture of the Soviet world behind official facades. In his extraordinary heroine, he has also created a vision and a voice that are unique in Russian literature.