Dva dlouholetí kamarádi a někdejší kolegové-učitelé se už pár let živí poněkud lukrativnějšími profesemi: jeden jako gigolo a druhý jako nájemný vrah. Aby si od svých náročných povolání na pár dní odpočali, vyrazí na řeku Sázavu. Jenomže muži jak známo nepřestávají pracovat ani na dovolené… Takový je náčrt filmového scénáře, pro nějž chce autor stůj co stůj získat otupělého producenta. Nabídne brutální scény? Nebo osudovou lásku? Lze snad s nadsázkou říct, že nová próza Michala Viewegha nabízí obojí: thriller i tragickou lovestory.
Michal Viewegh is one of the most popular contemporary Czech writers and the bestselling one. He writes about romantic relationships of his contemporaries with humour, and variously successful irony and attempts at deeper meaningfulness; he is sometimes compared to Nick Hornby by his fans.
His books, which, since the late 1990s, he publishes every spring, usually sell about 50,000 copies each, bringing him an upper-high-class income unparalleled among Czech writers (by his own boastful admissions, his royalties from a successful book are equal to roughly 8 years of an average Czech salary). His 2004 income was Kč 4 million. Viewegh likes to point out this success with readers, as well as the fact that his books have been translated to several languages and made into films, since he fell out of favor with critics in mid-1990s, which sentiment he heartily reciprocated in his following books.