This is still the same Igor Guberman — it seems that he has already been read more than once, often with sloppy stanzas, more than a frivolous choice of words and a deadly irony in relation to everything in a row, including himself.


Actually, this is what makes an elderly citizen of Israel, perhaps, the most Russian poet of recent decades. Part of the book is occupied by diary prose, but the main thing is, of course, “gariki”. Igor Huberman still aptly and caustically responds to changes in the life of society: «Freedom has a lot of variations, And they can change as you like, You can even refuse freedom — Voluntarily, and willingly, and freely.» And to the changes in oneself: “Left by an aged demon, Seized by epic despondency, I still look at women with interest, Already, however, purely aesthetic.”
Eksmo, 352 p.