In Viktor Pelevin's genre-bending novel 'The Sacred Book of the Werewolf,' we delve into the mystical life of A. Huli, a charming young woman in Moscow who moonlights as a prostitute. But A. Huli is not what she seems. Spanning centuries, her true nature as a two-thousand-year-old were-fox unfolds, with the power to seduce men and absorb their vitality through the entrancing dance of her tail. As she navigates the perplexing modern landscape of Russia, her path crosses with Alexander, a Russian intelligence officer with his own lycanthropic secrets. It is a meeting that spirals into a whirlwind of love, deception, and self-discovery. Pelevin's satirical prowess paints a vivid tale that is as magical as it is a piercing critique of Russia's societal echelons, where myth intertwines with harsh reality.