Meteleksky thinks it’s not a vacation, but a real extreme survival tour. He stayed in Osinovka for less than a day, but already managed to rip his jeans, get filthy in mud, and get hit with a bucket. He wanted new impressions—and here they are! It turns out that a cottage with no conveniences, a horde of nasty mosquitoes, a shop three days’ walk away, and the complete absence of civilization are called a “dacha.” Maybe it’s better to go for a stroll in a penguin costume than spend a month surviving in Osinovka?
In the book you’ll find: # a hero who, for the first time, ends up at a dacha and is shocked (asphalt-born kid—what can you take from him?) # a heroine who can cook deliciously # the village of Osinovka and its residents (some of them are very curious and don’t know the words “private life”) # lots of humor, lots of zucchini, autumn vibes, and all that dacha romance.