trip to Warsaw on the State Route №7 will confront the narrator with various visions of Poland's past and future, as well as eccentric bearers of these views: the sorcerer Gerard, a maker of elixirs, hipsters with weapons, a village magnate and his progressive brother-in-law. video with a fellow villager-transvestite. The roadside eventually acquires phantasmagoric features and scale, and casual conversations at gas stations and bars increasingly seem like big plans for the formation of the state. However, Zemovit Shcherek is far from a serious tone, especially from the desire to create a viable national project. On the contrary, "Seven" is written wittily and rather appeals to the reader's ability to perceive the book ironically.