Oleg Divov needs no introduction. For millions of fans of Russian science fiction, Divov embodies the avant-garde of the genre today. But in the story “To Kill One’s Father,” the writer appears before us from an unexpected side. There’s no science fiction here, nor the famous Divov-style humor…
What there is, instead, is subtle psychologism, lyricism, and—always—an absolutely honest “male” view of things.
The story was written on commission for the magazine “Man’s Health.” A shortened revised version was published in the magazine “Playboy” in 1998. The audiobook is recorded in the full author’s version of the work.