Frankfurt Book Fair 2013
Transcription
Frankfurt Book Fair 2013
A Frankfurt Book Fair 2013 Rights Catalogue Wydawnictwo literackie Contact Information S U P E RV I S O RY B O A R D Chairperson Vera Michalska-Hoffmann Tomasz Wardyński Mirosław Zaremba Council Chairperson Anna Zaremba-Michalska Editor-in-Chief Małgorzata Nycz Head Editorial Secretary Maria Rola Editorial Secretary Krystyna Zaleska Finance Director Dariusz Kurdziel Sales Director Grzegorz Głódkowski PR & Marketing Director Marcin Baniak Foreign Rights Manager Joanna Dąbrowska e-mail: [email protected] Editor Jolanta Korkuć e-mail: [email protected] Editor Paweł Ciemniewski e-mail: [email protected] Secretary Beata Krupa e-mail: [email protected] Address Wydawnictwo Literackie Publishers Co. Ltd ul. Długa 1, 31-147 Kraków NIP: 676-21-16-135 REGON: 357052753 KRS: 0000012638 tel.: +48 (12) 619 27 40 fax: +48 (12) 422 54 23 2013 Rights Catalogue 2012 Wydawnictwo Literackie www.wydawnictwoliterackie.pl 1 2 Contents 6 About Wydawnictwo Literackie FICTION Contemporary Fiction 10 11 12 14 15 17 19 20 21 23 24 26 27 29 30 32 34 36 38 40 41 44 45 46 47 50 51 52 53 55 58 59 60 Anderman Janusz – All the Time Anderman Janusz – That’s All Anderman Janusz – The Chain of Pure Hearts Franczak Jerzy – Da capo Franczak Jerzy – The Inhuman Comedy Grzegorzewska Gaja – The Return Janko Anna – The Matchbox Girl Janko Anna – The Passion According to Saint Hanka Janko Anna – The Small Annihilation Karpowicz Ignacy – Balladynas and Romances Karpowicz Ignacy – Fish Bones Karpowicz Ignacy – Gestures Karpowicz Ignacy – The Miracle Karpowicz Ignacy – Offbeat Karpowicz Ignacy – Sonka Klejnocki Jarosław – Death Options Kobza Piotr – Polish Retreat Kowalewski Włodzimierz – Moral People Maicher Katarzyna – Persimmon Miecznicka Magdalena – Fury Miecznicka Magdalena – The Marvelous Career of Magda M. Orłoś Kazimierz – The Forest Lovers’ Tale and Other Stories Orłoś Kazimierz – The House under the Sign of the Lute Orłoś Kazimierz – I Can’t Live Without You Pilch Jerzy Pilot Marian – Character Pilot Marian – Plume Pilot Marian – Vim Pilot Marian – The New Wilderness Przygodzki Błażej – With Surgical Precision Twardoch Szczepan – Eternal Grunwald Twardoch Szczepan – Morphine Twardoch Szczepan – The Land of the Quads Women’s Fiction 3 62 65 66 67 68 Fox Marta – Zuzanna Doesn’t Exist Grochola Katarzyna – The Crystal Angel Grochola Katarzyna – The Flutter of Wings Grochola Katarzyna – The Green Door Grochola Katarzyna – Houston, We Have a Problem Grochola Katarzyna – A Slightly Bigger Monday Jeromin-Gałuszka Grażyna – Don’t Leave Me 75 Michalak Katarzyna – The Cherry Manor 76 Michalak Katarzyna – Return to Poziomka 77 Michalak Katarzyna – Summer in Jagódka 78 Michalak Katarzyna – A Year in Poziomka 79 Michalak Katarzyna – In the Name of Love 81 Michalak Katarzyna – The Ferrin Game 82 Michalak Katarzyna – Return to Ferrin 83 Michalak Katarzyna – The Heart of Ferrin 84 Michalak Katarzyna – The War of Ferrin 85 Michalak Katarzyna – Miss Ferrin 88 Wiśniewski Janusz – Blood Flow 89 Wiśniewski Janusz – My Greatest Intimacy 90 Wiśniewski Janusz – Scenes from the Life through the Wall 69 72 Young Adult Fiction 92 96 97 98 99 Nowak Ewa – Bracelet Terakowska Dorota – Cocoon Terakowska Dorota – It Terakowska Dorota – Where the Angels Fall Terakowska Dorota – The Witch’s Daughter Science Fiction & Fantasy Orbitowski Łukasz – Holy Wroclaw Orbitowski Łukasz – It’s Coming 103 Orbitowski Łukasz – Phantoms 105 Piskorski Krzysztof – The Chiaroscuro Chronicles 107 Protasiuk Michał – Revolution Day 101 102 NON-FICTION History Ćwięk Henryk – Captain Sosnowski 111 Kaczmarek Ryszard – Poles in the Wermacht 113 Kaczmarek Ryszard – Poles in the Kaiser’s Army During World War One 115 Kopka Bogusław – A Gulag on the Vistula. On Labor Camps in Poland 117 Kowal Paweł – Between Majdan and Smoleńsk. Interviewers: Paweł Legutko and Dobrosław Rodziewicz 120 Motyka Grzegorz – From the Volhynia Massacre to Operation Vistula. Polish-Ukrainian Conflicts 1943–1947 121 Motyka Grzegorz – The Hunt is on for the White Poles… The Battle Between the NKVD (Soviet Secret Service) and the Polish Underground, 1944–1953 123 Pepłoński Andrzej – War for Hidden Causes. In the Second Polish Republic’s Secret Service, 1918–1945 125 Petelicki Sławomir, Komar Michał– GROM: Power and Honour 127 Sowa Andrzej Leon – A Political History of Poland 1944–1991 129 Wołos Mariusz – Of Piłsudski, Dmowski, and the May Coup: Soviet Diplomacy toward Poland during the 1925–1926 Political Crisis 109 Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs 4 132 Baniewicz Elżbieta – Erwin Axer. The Theatre of Words and Thoughts Robert Brylewski, Rafał Księżyk – Crisis in Babylon Głowiński Michał – Autobiography 139 Grochola Katarzyna, Szelągowska Dorota – Tapestry 141 Hartwig Julia – Diaries 143 Komendołowicz Iza – Elka. Recollections about Elżbieta Czyżewska 145 Kuryluk Ewa – Frascati 146 Kuryluk Ewa – Goldi 149 Masłowska Dorota, Drotkiewicz Dorota – The World Soul 152 Michalska Francesca – All the Joy of Living 154 Pankiewicz Tadeusz – The Pharmacy in the Krakow Ghetto 156 Staniszkis Jadwiga, Cieślar Artur – East and West. An Encounter 158 Stańko Tomasz, Księżyk Rafał – Desperado 161 Stuhr Jerzy – The Stuhrs. A Family History 162 Stuhr Jerzy – That’s What I Think… 165 Sumińska Dorota – Animal in the Bedroom 166 Sumińska Dorota – Still on Four Paws 169 Tymański Tymon, Księżyk Rafał – A Biography of Tymon Tymański 171 Wałęsa Danuta, ed. Adamowicz Piotr – Dreams and Secrets 173 Włodek Ludwika – A Tale of the Iwaszkiewicz Family 134 138 Religion 176 178 Bauman Zygmunt, Obirek Stanisław – Of God and Man: Conversations Stryczek Jacek – The FaceGod Project Self-Help 180 181 183 186 187 185 Grochola Katarzyna, Wiśniewski Andrzej – Marital and Extra-Marital Fun and Games Grochola Katarzyna, Wiśniewski Andrzej – Loving Relationships and Break Ups Kajdański Edward – Chinese Medicine for Beginners Spodaryk Mikołaj, Grabowska Elżbieta – I Know What My Child Is Eating Sumińska Dorota, Krzywicka Dorota, Stanisławska Irena A. – How to Live in Harmony with the Bigger and Smaller Members of the Household Woydyłło Ewa – How to Live with Depression, but Not in Depression Travel 189 Głombiowski – Come to Zocalo in the Evening 191 Grzywaczewski Tomasz – Through the Wild East 194 Włodarczyk Barbara – There Is No One Russia POETRY 5 197 205 Ewa Lipska – Dear Ms. Schubert Ewa Lipska – Echo Matywiecki Piotr – The Audience Mikołajewski Jarosław – Broken Glasses Mikołajewski Jarosław – On the Inhalation Waga Adam – Limping Waga Adam – Obolus (Pilot Marian – Final Resolutions) 206 LIST OF AUTHORS AVAILABLE FOR TRANSLATION 198 200 202 203 204 About Wydawnictwo Literackie For 60 years we have been inspiring, creating and publishing: exceptional Authors, exceptional books. In the very heart of Krakow, in the famed and distinctive Pod Globusem Building on Długa Street 1, stands the headquarters of Wydawnictwo Literackie Publishers – one of the largest and most highly respected literary publishers in Poland. Founded in 1953 (this year we are celebrating our 60th anniversary!), Wydawnictwo Literackie Publishers has been inspiring the most fascinating literary phenomena and publishing the finest names in Polish and world literature for over half a century, including novelists, poets, essayists, historians, and cultural scholars. We are, above all, publishers of literature, particularly of Polish and foreign prose and non‑fiction – including important memoirs, history books, popular science titles, and literature for young people. Among the authors affiliated with WL are Polish and foreign Nobel Prize winners, as well as outstanding, admired, and award-winning figures from the worlds of culture, literature, and art. We would not, however, be considered one of the most influential on the market if we did not invite the most interesting young and promising writers to work with us, as well as the leading names in popular literature. My love affair with Wydawnictwo Literackie Publishers began many years ago. In 1957 they wanted to publish my novel, The Issa Valley, and in May they received my manuscript. I admit that, because of my neglect, the signing of the contract was postponed till August. Then the manuscript was readied for print. Unfortunately, on 14 December the printing was halted “following discussions at the Central Committee of the Polish United Workers’ Party Publishing Commission, owing to the general political activities of the author.” Nonetheless, I recall with gratitude that the entire fee for the print run of 10,000 copies was paid to my family. The publishing house returned to The Issa Valley after I received the Nobel Prize, and its first Polish publication was in 1981. I clearly had a great deal of sentiment for them, given that they issued my book of poetry entitled A Hymn of Pearl in 1983, and in 1984, a two-volume edition of my collected poems. I entrusted the publication of my collected works to two Krakow publishers, Wydawnictwo Literackie and Znak. This clearly shows the esteem I hold for the team at Wydawnictwo Literackie Publishers. – Czesław Miłosz 6 Wydawnictwo Literackie Publishers is the only publishing house in Poland capable of such enormous and prestigious undertakings as the collected works of Stanisław Brzozowski, Witold Gombrowicz, Czesław Miłosz, and Antoni Kępiński, a thirty-four volume publication of the works of Stanisław Lem, the publication of the monumental collection of quotes entitled Winged Words, edited by Henryk Markiewicz and Andrzej Romanowski, the laborious preparation of a fifteen-volume scholarly edition of the works of Gustaw Herling-Grudziński, and the publication of Sławomir Mrożek’s diaries and correspondence. We pride ourselves on a record number of awards and nominations gained for our authors and for the publishing house itself – we publish books by winners of the Nike Literary Award, the Kościelski Award, the Janusz Zajdel Polish Fandom Award, the K. Wyka Award, the Polityka Passport, the Literatura na Świecie Award, the Gdynia Literary Award, and many others. Wydawnictwo Literackie Publishers is one of the first in Poland to have begun selling books in the increasingly popular medium of electronic publishing, in e-book and audio book formats. These new spaces for fine literature are a great opportunity for authors and readers both – to our mind, it is worth using the latest technologies to get books out to as many diverse readers as possible! My relationship with Wydawnictwo Literackie Publishers is affectionate, bilateral, deep, extracurricular, fruitful, inspiring, interpersonal, long-term, multifaceted, precise, subtle, valuable, and vivacious. Because I do not know which term is the most important here, I have listed them all, in alphabetical order. For the good of future authors, I hope that Wydawnictwo Literackie carries on for another hundred years. – Wisława Szymborska Wydawnictwo Literackie Publishers means brilliant writers, the foremost figures in culture, and inspiring personalities. PERSONALITIES Wisława Szymborska, Czesław Miłosz, Father Joachim Badeni, Stanisław Barańczak, Władysław Bartoszewski, Zygmunt Bauman, Jan Błoński, Andrzej Bobkowski, Zbigniew Brzeziński, Karl Dedecius, Michał Głowiński, Gustaw Herling-Grudziński, Józefa Hennelowa, Maria Janion, Stanisław Lem, Henryk Markiewicz, Sławomir Mrożek, Maria Orwid, Wojciech Pszoniak, Tadeusz Różewicz, Tomasz Stańko, Jerzy Stuhr, Dorota Sumińska, Jan Józef Szczepański, Hanna Świda-Ziemba, Jan Twardowski, Karol Wojtyła, Adam Zamoyski, Antonina Żabińska 7 POLISH PROSE WRITERS Janusz Anderman, Jacek Dukaj, Jerzy Franczak, Marek S. Huberath, Anna Janko, Ignacy Karpowicz, Włodzimierz Kowalewski, Zbigniew Kruszyński, Mikołaj Łoziński, Magdalena Miecznicka, Łukasz Orbitowski, Kazimierz Orłoś, Jerzy Pilch, Marian Pilot, Jerzy Sosnowski, Olga Tokarczuk, Szczepan Twardoch ESSAYISTS, NON-FICTION WRITERS Przemysław Czapliński, Tomasz Fiałkowski, Aleksander Fiut, Tomasz Grzywaczewski, Jerzy Jarzębski, Michał Paweł Markowski, Tadeusz Nyczek, Marian Stala, Jadwiga Staniszkis, Agata Tuszyńska, Teresa Walas, Barbara Włodarczyk, Ewa Woydyłło STARS OF POPULAR LITERATURE Katarzyna Grochola, Marta Fox, Grzegorz Kasdepke, Katarzyna Krenz, Roma Ligocka, Katarzyna Michalak, Katarzyna T. Nowak, Agnieszka Pilaszewska, Janusz L. Wiśniewski, Dorota Terakowska HISTORIANS Andrzej Andrusiewicz, Henryk Batowski, Czesław Brzoza, Andrzej Chwalba, Henryk Ćwięk, Ryszard Kaczmarek, Kazimierz Krajewski, Jan M. Małecki, Mariusz Markiewicz, Grzegorz Motyka, Andrzej Paczkowski, Artur Patek, Andrzej Pepłoński, Andrzej Przewoźnik, Jan Rydel, Andrzej Leon Sowa, Stanisław Szczur, Ryszard Terlecki, Janusz Węc, Adam Zamoyski POETS Julia Hartwig, Zbigniew Herbert, Urszula Kozioł, Ewa Lipska, Piotr Matywiecki, Jarosław Mikołajewski, Ewa E. Nowakowska, Czesław Miłosz, Jolanta Stefko, Tadeusz Różewicz, Wisława Szymborska, Halina Poświatowska, Piotr Szewc, Janusz Szuber, Jan Sztaudynger, Adam Zagajewski FOREIGN WRITERS Margaret Atwood, John Banville, John D. Barrow, Walter Benjamin, Hans Georg Berg, Thomas Bernhard, Jorge Luis Borges, Michael Brooks, Emmanuel Carrere, Rachel Cusk, Kiran Desai, Annie Dillard, Robin Dunbar, Joel Egloff, T.S. Eliot, Anne Enright, Hans Magnus Enzensbergera, Oriana Fallaci, Niall Ferguson, George Friedman, Max Frisch, William Golding, Tim Harford, Venedict Yerofeyev, Hedi Kaddour, Asa Larsson, Doris Lessing, Primo Levi, Jonathan Littell, Armistead Maupin, Cormac McCarthy, Alice Munro, Orhan Pamuk, Wiktor Pielewin, Sylvia Plath, Thomas Pynchon, Atiq Rahimi, Philippe Segur, Elif Shafak, Ian Stewart, Jurgen Thorvald, Mika Waltari, Virginia Woolf, Lucy Maud Montgomery 8 FI C T I O N Janusz Anderman Janusz Anderman (b. 1949) is one of Poland’s most respected contemporary writers, a translator of Czech literature, film director, author of scripts, plays, and radio plays. He is also the author of a popular prose series entitled Photography, and the novels That’s All, Playing for Time, and All the Time, which was nominated for the Nike Literary Award. A film was made based on All the Time, entitled The Lesser Evil, directed by Janusz Morgenstern. Anderman’s short stories served as the canvas for the film Country of the World, directed by Maria Zmarz-Koczanowicz, and for Olaf Lubaszenko’s short directorial debut. 9 FI C T I O N Janusz Anderman All the Time Cały Czas Keynote One of the most interesting books about Poland from communist times and the country as it is today! Andre Gide’s The Immoralist combined with Thomas Mann’s Confessions of Felix Krull laced with a smattering of Tadeusz DołęgaMostowicz’s Kariera Nikodema Dyzmy (The Career of Nikodem Dyzma). Sales points •A large dose of irony, satire and an intelligent sense of humour. •Screen version of the novel in preparation. •The book attracted a great deal of controversy and was widely commented on in the press. Date of publication: 2006 Pages: 312 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights sold: France (Noir sur Blanc) English sample available Description Poland in a Blaze of Disgrace! The story of a writer who has never written a book, yet has willingly put his name to the works of others. He has only seduced married women, yet those who were most influential. He has played an expert game of appearances and created a life philosophy from his insincerity and wicked deeds. A.Z. is a mutation of Nikodem Dyzma and Citizen Piszczyk. The tomfoolery of these protagonists has been replaced by the cynicism of A.Z. Only one thing has remained unchanged and resistant to historical transformations — the absurdities of the Polish reality, in which the main character of Cały Czas acts with impunity, until the moment when he sees through his car windscreen a freight truck hurtling towards him... The first contemporary novel about the 50’s generation and its head-on collision with the ethos of a hero of our times. How many such A.Z’s do we see every day. They have forged something, cheated somebody, bared their bottoms, palmed something off, landed something and the media is full of them from morning to evening, the esteemed jacks of all trades… Tomorrow belongs to him. Very enlightening literature. Bogdan Wojdyła, “Angora” Anderman has written an excellent and funny novel that unmasks the mechanisms reigning over cultural life in every system of government and ironically describes the last decades of Polish history. Leszek Bugajski, “Newsweek” Target market Lovers of intelligent, perverse novels of manners 10 FI C T I O N Janusz Anderman That’s All To wszystko Keynote A masterful story of an author with writer’s block, bringing to mind the prose of Saul Bellow. A masterstroke — and that’s all. Sales points •The latest novel by one of the most highly-ranked Polish writers of his generation •Extremely favorable reviews from readers and critics alike Description Date of publication: 2008 Pages: 314 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World How far will a writer go to call attention to his book? Scandal? Crime? Madness? The protagonist of Janusz Anderman’s latest book will stop at nothing to save his work from oblivion… A cunning joke, or maybe a deadly serious tale? A novel that overturns stereotypes about the contemporary artist and his place in the contemporary hyper-commercialized world. Irony of the highest grade. A book that is even more courageous than The Whole Time, showing the new face of Janusz Anderman’s prose. Target market Lovers of brave psychological, ironic and sociological literature, those interested in the contemporary world. 11 FI C T I O N Janusz Anderman The Chain of Pure Hearts Łańcuch czystych serc Keynote The Chain… shows a splendid sense of observation, a brilliant ear for language, and a rough form of magical realism from a master of the short form – Janusz Anderman. Sales points •A selection of the writer’s finest short stories to date Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 292 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World Anderman listens to people on the street, showing them at turning points in Polish history (during Martial Law, and the transformation period after the Round Table) with a grotesque sense of humor. We find a monologue by a man on a bunk in an intern center, a picture of a pile of books brought to the paper mill from a bankrupt warehouse, and among the books sits a retired teacher... Everyday scenes played out in front of the Palace of Culture and Science… A disoriented crowd during a demonstration. The author shows the state of people’s minds with no holds barred, rendering the atmosphere of the social moods. He finds his own way of doing this, one that is characteristic and appeals to the imagination, while working powerfully on the emotions. He incarnates himself, with a phenomenal feel for language, into characters both recognizable and terrifying. A feature film was made based on “Country of the World” (dir. Maria Zmarz‑Koczanowicz), while on the basis of two other stories Olaf Lubaszenko (in his directorial debut) made short films for Education Television, with a lecture by Bronisław Maj delivered from the top of the Palace of Culture. Brilliant stories, for which critics can find no comparison in Polish literature, and which readers can finally have in one volume. “A great imitator of others’ voices, a writer particularly sensitive to the comedy of it all, who pushes his passion for mockery to the extreme, unwilling to sacrifice his individuality for anything.” Marta Wyka “Anderman is a fiery polemist, gifted with an absurd sense of humor and the ability to draw a surreal portrait.” The Philadelphia Inquirer “Anderman spares no one, flatters no one, and leaves no one with any illusions.” The Guardian 12 FI C T I O N Jerzy Franczak Jerzy Franczak (b. 1978) — prose-writer, poet, literary scholar and critic, and academic teacher. The author of novels, short-story collections and essays, including: Three Histories (2001), Murmurings (2004), Algae, Calques and Gear Racks (2004), a collection of essays called Gravitations (2007) and a novel, The Changing Room (2008). He has also written two books on contemporary literature: On Unreality. Sartre — Gombrowicz — Nabokov (2002) and In Search of Reality. The World View of Polish Modernist Prose (2007). AWARDS AND DISTINCTIONS Winner of the Stanisław Grochowiak Award (1999). Winner of the Stanisław Czycz Award (2000). Winner of the Premio Tivoli Award (2001). FOREIGN-LANGUAGE TRANSLATIONS Italian, French, German, English, Czech. BOOKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR PUBLISHED BY WYDAWNICTWO LITERACKIE Novels The Inhuman Comedy (2009) Da Capo (2010) 13 FI C T I O N Jerzy Franczak Da Capo Da Capo Keynote A young author with a wealth of books and a substantial following, addressing problems of modern-day youth Sales points •A rugged, gritty take on youth culture and corporate indoctrination in trendy Krakow •Savvy and street-smart, but also a book with a heart, unafraid to tackle difficult family dynamics •Franczak has already been translated into several languages, including, English, German and French Publication date: 2010 Pages: 256 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World Rights sold: Slovenia (KUD Police Dubove) Description Is Da Capo a rollicking adventure in the spirit of Roman Polanski’s Frantic, replete with a young femme fatale and a man with nothing left to lose? Is it an unflinching examination of dysfunctional family relationships (both with one’s parents and with one’s wife and child) and a valiant attempt to salvage something from them? An inside look at the seedy underbelly of Krakow’s bars and night life? A lesson in how to get fired from your corporate office job? Well, it’s all of these things, obviously, as well as a sequel to Franczak’s previous Wydawnictwo Literackie Publishers success, The Inhuman Comedy — the new novel’s protagonist is the brother of the previous one’s. Franczak’s great achievement here is to have not sat content with writing a gripping novel that young people will identify with. He has upped the stakes by also making this a novel that takes emotional risks, and demonstrates a universal comprehension of human interaction way beyond his years. Target market For young people — does a good job addressing itself to those up on the latest fashions. 14 FI C T I O N Jerzy Franczak The Inhuman Comedy Nieludzka komedia Keynote Written with spleen, full of black humor, this is an intellectually refined tale of the horrors of daily life and modern crime. Sales points •One of Poland’s most promising young writers. •Winner of many prestigious literary awards and scholarships. •Recipient of many scholarships (from the Minister of National Education, the City of Krakow, ‘Polityka’ Weekly, and the Foundation for Polish Education). Publication date: 2009 Pages: 168 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World Description The Inhuman Comedy is on the surface a humorous tale, light and breezy, though somewhat unpleasant. It is being told by one Emil Król, a writer manqué, a frustrated teacher and an unlucky lover. His stories of his family, his travels and his work are filled with venomous humor and bitter irony. By the reader’s smile vanishes from his mouth when this kind skeptic commits a bestial murder, killing his lover, the mother-to-be of his child, and then chops up her body… Locked in prison, he describes his life and eavesdrops on the media furor gathering around his crime. Without sacrificing a touch of its wit, Franczak’s novel ultimately reveals its Dantesque dimensions and changes into a meditation on contemporary evil, both intangible and stripped of its essence. The Inhuman Comedy is one of the finest examples of ‘young writers’ I’ve come across lately. Perfection of craft and knowledge of literature are visible on every page. Franczak’s novel is a sophisticated, erudite game – the very title contains clear allusions to Dante’s Divine Comedy and Balzac’s Human Comedy (the former work serves the author in discussing the nature of contemporary evil, and he skillfully reflects the latter in the satirical way he portrays the misery of our daily activities) — but this is just the beginning. Patrycja Pustkowiak, “Dziennik Gazeta Prawna” Jerzy Franczak is without a doubt one of the most interesting figures among today’s young Polish writers. Leszek Bugajski, “Newsweek” Target market Lovers of contemporary literature, multi-layered psychological prose, and novels about our surroundings. 15 FI C T I O N Gaja Grzegorzewska Gaja Grzegorzewska (b. 1980) is a writer of detective novels. She graduated from film theory at the Jagiellonian University. After her debut in 2006 she was declared the youngest and most promising Polish author of detective novels. In 2011 she received the prestigious High Caliber award for The Drowner, which was named detective novel of the year. As a lover of detective novels, she also writes a column for Portal Kryminalny. She is adept at the Brazilian martial art of Capoeira. She lives in Krakow. Author photograph © Anna Ciupryk 16 FI C T I O N Gaja Grzegorzewska The Return Powrót Keynote A dark detective novel by Poland’s female Chandler Sales points •The new Polish queen of the detective novel •Winner of the prestigious High Caliber award for detective novel of the year •A new, dark take on Krakow Description Date of publication: Spring 2014 Pages: 300 Category: Crime novel Rights available: World Modern-day Krakow, forbidden feelings and a hunt through the darkest corners of Krakow – a city full of sin and mystery. The protagonist of this book is the Professor; he was raised in a dangerous area of Krakow among rotten, corrupt people. He has a dark and shady past which weighs upon his life. At the same time, he is an intelligent, well-read person who is sensitive and lives by his own code of honor. He fits in with neither the world he grew up in nor the one to which he aspired. After two years in exile in the southern seas, the Professor returns to Krakow. Though he does not wants to return to the world of crime, it has its stakes on him. New times and power structures have come to the city, and the housing estate where the Professor grew up has a new King. Moreover, the King’s wife has disappeared, and it is up to the Professor to find her. As if that wasn’t enough, a fifteen-year-old girl has appeared in his path, a nymphette whom he is forced to look after. The Professor sets off on the trail… Meanwhile, a serial killer has shown up in the area belonging to the King. The King will do anything to catch him… Target market Lovers of crime novels, thrillers, and tales of suspense. 17 FI C T I O N Anna Janko Anna Janko (b. 1957) is one of Poland’s finest contemporary novelists, poets, and literary critics. She was a finalist for the Nike Literary Award in 2001. She has also won numerous other literary awards and distinctions. Her novel The Matchbox Girl (nominated for Cogito Media Award in 2008 and for the Angelus Central European Literary Award) was enthusiastically received by critics and readers alike – it was called mandatory therapeutic literature for every woman. The Passion According to Saint Hanka is her second novel. She is currently working on a new book entitled The Small Annihilation. Author photograph © Agnieszka Herman 18 FI C T I O N Anna Janko The Matchbox Girl Dziewczyna z zapałkami Keynote Literary, therapeutic, intimate, and thoroughly modern, The Matchbox Girl is a striking novelistic debut by an established poet. Sales points • Winner of and nominee for several awards, including the Warsaw Literary Premiere, the Cogito Media Award, the Angelus Literary Award, and the Władysław Reymont Literary Award • A “women’s novel” that does not talk down to its reader, and has much to say to men and women both. Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 350 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World, excl. Germany English synopsis available English sample available Description The debut novel by poet Anna Janko, who delights and enchants from the very first page. The author’s language is beautiful and flowing, and does not shy from experiments, hovering on the verge of prose realism and poetic mysticism. The narrator is an extremely sensitive woman stuck in a marriage that has, over time, turned into a kind of prison. While going about her everyday activities, somewhere between hanging up the laundry and making lunch, she got lost. She lost her own identity. Her husband, who was meant to be the only one for her, turned out to be an insensitive go-getter, and her mother-in-law has despised her from the start. Ultimately she escapes into alcohol, which makes the cruel world more pleasant and approachable, and writing, which partially serves a therapeutic function, and helps her to put her life in order. This novel is a rousing success. Dariusz Nowacki, Gazeta Wyborcza Anna Janko has written a very subversive, very intelligent, and very female novel. Its femininity is subtle, its subversiveness surprising, its intelligence simply dazzling. What more could you ask? Paweł Huelle One feels a kinship here with Sylvia Plath – Janko’s language works on our senses in a similar way. K. Kofta Target market Readers interested in contemporary life, readers of psychological prose and fine Polish prose as such. 19 FI C T I O N Anna Janko The Passion According to Saint Hanka Pasja według św. Hanki Keynote The Passion According to Saint Hanka is a total examination of love – and what makes it so necessarily incomprehensible Sales points • An acknowledged poet makes a graceful shift to novels, sacrificing none of the depth and beauty that made her originally admired Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 368 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World, excl. Germany English synopsis available English sample available “Love walks among people and searches for lovers. It matters little who they are and how their loves are entangled, how old they are, how much energy they have, or how much money or time, what their views, plans, obligations, and duties consist in,” Janko writes in her novel. She tells the story of Hanka – the protagonist of her previous novel, several years down the road. Hanka, who at first “took a husband as if he were freedom,” is disappointed with the married life. She meets an old lover and an affair begins; there is betrayal, guilt, and pain, but also delight, enchantment and disenchantment, heaven and hell… It is all described with an extraordinarily insightful dynamic, all in the context of the drama of love. “What is most incredible in this story is a sense of hunger. Hunger for literature and for the sensuous side of life”. Przemysław Czapliński Target market Readers of contemporary prose that is ambitious and demanding, and readers of lighter “women’s” literature. 20 FI C T I O N Anna Janko The Small Annihilation Mała Zagłada Keynote Another novel of the esteemed witer and poet – Anna Janko! A very personal, moving family history dealing with the author’s mother fate. Anna Janko, whose all novels have so far been appreciated by the audience and critics alike, is working on a new novel, that all her fans are looking forward to. The setting is a village called Sochy at the Zamojskie territory. It was completely destroyed within hours on the first of June in 1943. It was burnt down by the Germans and its inhabitants were shot. Left among the ruins were children and a handful of adults. Only one house was left intact. One of the children happens to be the author’s mother, who was eight years old at the time… Sochy are ranked among four groups of European places which symbolize those most affected by the Second World War. They have had an artistic impact on documentary film makers and artists, they were featured in school books, but also served as major themes in numerous literary and cinematic works (like for example Le vieux fusil with Romy Schneider). In Poland, what happened in Sochy is all but forgotten and the younger generations have no associations with the name whatsoever. Anna Janko wishes to fill this memory gap. The book will be based on documents: written and oral accounts, photographs. And what is most important – reminiscences of the witnesses of those tragic events: Teresa Ferenc (author’s mother) and Bronisława Szawara. This is, as always, an ambitious piece of writing, demanding from its readers an undivided attention, and the topic is much more difficult than in her previous titles, however it is also a very rewarding read. Janko is planning to combine a very personal contemporary stories with real live events, reportage as well as sociological and psychological reflections. Date of publication: forthcoming Pages: to come Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World excl. Germany 21 FI C T I O N Ignacy Karpowicz Ignacy Karpowicz was born in 1976. He is a writer (Niehalo, Miracle, The Emperor’s New Flower), and a translator from English, Spanish and Amhar. He is a traveler whose destinations have included Central America and East Africa, and who has lived in Costa Rica and Ethiopia. He is currently working on his new novel about the intricate nature of relationships and a question of identity. OUTSTANDING AWARDS AND DISTINCTIONS Nomination for the “Polityka” Passport for Niehalo „Polityka” Passport for Balladynas and Romances Nomination for the NIKE Award for Gestures Nominated for the NIKE Award for Balladynas and Romances BOOKS BY THE AUTHOR IN THE WYDAWNICTWO LITERACKIE PUBLISHERS CATALOGUE Novels Gestures (2008) Balladynas and Romances (2010) Offbeat (2013, re-edition) The Miracle (2013, re-edition) Ości (2013) Sonka (forthcoming) 22 FI C T I O N Ignacy Karpowicz Balladynas and Romances Balladyny i romanse Keynote Take a pinch of Bulgakov, a touch of Rabelais and a healthy dose of Kundera, and you are starting to approach Karpowicz’s world. Sales points •Nominated for the prestigious NIKE Award (2011) •“Polityka” Passport Award •A mixture of wildly imaginative flights of fancy and serious existential reflection Description Publication date: 2010 Pages: 576 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World Rights sold: Hungary (Typotex), Spain (Rayo Verde Editorial) English synopsis available English sample available Things on Earth aren’t looking so good. The old, mighty Gods have pushed out the trivial, yet ruthless little gods of pop culture. The world of the global village provides no sense of stability and security. People are isolated and have long lost their hope for a change of fate – they spend their lives from one day to the next, apathetic and bored… And to make matters worse, the coffee starts running out. But one day the gods begin to act. A large group of them appears among the people. Will Nike, Aphrodite, Jesus, Osiris, Lucifer and others manage to bring back the proper hierarchy? Will humanity once again believe? Ignacy Karpowicz’s latest novel is a brilliantly wrought, ironic treatise on modernity. It is at once amusing and terrifying. Provocative and blasphemous. Some will like it. Others won’t. And that’s the way it should be. Target market Those interested in the outer limits of modern literary invention, and in authors willing to compromise nothing to tell their story. 23 FI C T I O N Ignacy Karpowicz Fish Bones Ości Keynote A modern literary danse macabre – wild and unpredictable, it leaves you breathless! Sales points •One of the top rated Polish writers of the younger generation •Twice nominated for the prestigious NIKE Literary Award •Winner of the Polityka Passport in 2012 Description Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 468 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World Right sold: Hungary (Typotex) How to understand a person who has erased his Facebook profile? Can a wife come to like her husband’s lover? And what links a married couple, a gay pair, and an utterly hairless man? In spite of appearances, a great deal indeed… Fish Bones a tale of the tangled nature of human relationships, full of games and judgments. Sometimes semi-serious and sometimes dead serious. And it is very, very good. The beginning of this novel sounds innocent enough: „Beyond seven delusions and as many dreams, beyond the forests of mysteries and silence, some time ago somewhere in Warsaw…”. But nothing in this novel is innocent, predictable, or evident. „Karpowicz’s novel is a complex and enormously intelligent weave. It tells of two families in which betrayal and extra-marital affairs lead less to destruction than to the expansion of relationships. What is decisive here are feelings stronger than lust and attitudes weaker than sincerity. It is precisely this suggestion – that a lasting bond means not always calling a spade a spade, a necessary dose of hypocrisy, and a discrepancy between behavior and opinions – makes Karpowicz’s Fish Bones one of the most intriguing novels about families that has been written in recent years.” Przemysław Czapliński „However it might sound, this book is extraordinarily juicy. And so hot that it burns.” Michał Nogaś „If you are traveling by bus or train and see someone across from you reading Fish Bones, you can be more than sure that he’ll be wearing a wonderful, sincere, and beautiful smile! Just like the one I’ve got today! A home with Fish Bones is a happy home!” Maciej Stuhr 24 FI C T I O N „Beneath its seemingly carefree approach to literature we can clearly see the various layers of the book, its bones; Karpowicz proves not only his great awareness as a writer, but also his high ranking among Poland’s best contemporary storytellers.” Marek Styczyński, Kultura.onet.pl „An aging literary critic, a depressed female biologist, a gay man with a proclivity for pedantry and a few other people whose bases in reality are not so difficult to guess meet in these pages in unexpected circumstances. This is a story full of the dazzling irony known to readers of Ballads and Romances, as well as the psychological depth of the earlier Gestures.” Małgorzata I. Niemczyńska, Gazeta Wyborcza Target market Lovers of Ignacy Karpowicz’s work, readers of ambitious contemporary prose. 25 FI C T I O N Ignacy Karpowicz Gestures Gesty Keynote Can you find out what life is really about after forty years old? This novel says that you can always uncover all the mysteries. Everywhere. Sales points •One of the most clever and interesting contemporary Polish prose writers •A compelling story whose emotional content should ring true for every reader over forty Description Date of publication: 2008 Pages: 258 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World Rights sold: Lithuania (Vaga) English synopsis available English sample available Karpowicz’s Gestures is a story of solitude, silence and alienation. It is a tale about discovering your home, about an attempt to understand and name past events, and to put them in order. The forty-year-old protagonist leaves his apartment in the big city and goes back to where he grew up, to visit his mortally ill mother, whom he hasn’t seen for some months. The protagonist’s departure turns out, however, to be just the start of the journey… A psychologically precise and moving vivisection of a “man in transition.” In a word: powerful stuff. * Karpowicz’s prose has courage and humor, it contains ordinary reality and an extraordinary imagination. And there is also something that leads us to believe that the author of Miracle is here in our literature to stay, and that he has many more pleasures to offer readers — a clear, original and well-measured style. Robert Ostaszewski Target market Lovers of interesting prose that reveals the truth about the readers themselves; moving, intelligent and bittersweet tales of fate, and protagonists who often remind us a bit of ourselves. 26 FI C T I O N Ignacy Karpowicz The Miracle Cud Keynote The second, dashing novel by Ignacy Karpowicz will disarm the reader with its dazzling concept and linguistic virtuosity. Ignacy Karpowicz: In The Miracle we are dealing with love, and love in our Western cultural sphere is (or was) associated with the idea of God. God is love. And God – the narrator of The Miracle – is a figure from a hyper-real and fantastical world. Moreover, God is the wittiest non-person in the Universe. The clash of these structures: high and low, divine and human, realistic and hyper-realistic, brings very interesting results. And amusing ones, I hope. Date of publication: forthcoming in autumn 2013 Pages: appr. 300 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World Rights sold: Hungary (Typotex) 27 Description The main protagonist is a twenty-something male named Mikołaj; he dies in an accident on the first page of the novel and then... The body of the corpse maintains a steady temperature, thirty-six or seven degrees (the doctor comments: “for the first time in history we have a sick corpse on our hands” – I quote this phrase to show the author’s peculiar sense of humor), and shows no signs of decay. The action of the novel circulates around the body of Mikołaj, which is transported from one place to another. The novel also includes the notes of Mikołaj’s father, in which Karpowicz brilliantly adopts a biblical style to depict the story of the protagonist and his childhood. These notes reveal that the father was writing on the command of a divine messenger, revealing the extraordinary nature of Mikołaj. Except that the divine messenger might just also be a delusion of the father, who is seldom sober. As a dead body, Mikołaj becomes a catalyst of events. These are as remarkable as his condition – that of a warm corpse. A young doctor named Anna falls in love with him, having the dim suspicion that she once met him somewhere before, though she does not know where and how, and that contact with him, though he is dead, will brighten up her dull, meaningless existence. The doctors try to hold on to the body for as long as possible, hoping for a medical breakthrough that will bring them fame. The family tries to retrieve his body. And ordinary people, whom the tabloids inform about Mikołaj’s case, want to reach him, hoping for some kind of miracle, healing, or merely comfort. Everyone seems to want something from Mikołaj, everyone has his own stake in the corpse’s miraculous properties. Karpowicz’s novel is more than a grotesque, satirical tale about people counting on divine intervention in spite of common sense, in spite of their lifestyles, where the material things clearly dominate over the spiritual ones; they want contact with a mystery. The most important thing in this book is a different miracle altogether – one that is more ordinary and down-to-earth. The key question here is, who is less alive: Mikołaj, or the people around him? Karpowicz creates a whole gallery of characters, both major and minor, who are dealing with failed, mediocre lives. Mikołaj’s parents, Anna, her ex-fiance FI C T I O N Artur, Mikołaj’s ex-girlfriend, the woman who ran him over – all their lives have come to a standstill. They work, party, make love, eat, they do everything any living person does, but in fact they are practically dead, because their lives lack meaning. They live off of impetus without knowing why, they suffer, but do nothing about it. They understand neither themselves nor others, even those nearest to them. They only need an outside impulse, an accident, a sudden coincidence, to finally see that they want to change something. In Karpowicz’s novel the warm corpse is one such impulse; the series of events initiated by the main protagonist makes the characters in the novel finally begin to live their lives, or at least to hope that they will begin to live. And this is precisely the miracle. Robert Ostaszewski, Gazeta Wyborcza Target market Lovers of Ignacy Karpowicz’s work, readers of ambitious contemporary prose. 28 FI C T I O N Ignacy Karpowicz Offbeat Niehalo Keynote A provocative novel about one day in the life of a frustrated young man which suddenly takes on a whole new dimension… Sales points •Twice nominated for the prestigious NIKE Literary Award •Winner of the Polityka Passport in 2012 •A novel nominated for the Polityka Passport •One of the most highly-rated Polish writers of the younger generation Description Date of publication: 2013 (re-edition) Pages: 232 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World Ignacy Karpowicz’s much-lauded novel about a day in the life of a Polish literature MA student and beginning journalist for a provincial newspaper who get drawn into some bizarre events. The provincial Polish town of B. Ambling about it is one rebellious young student of Polish literature, a beginning journalist for the local newspaper. Maciek lives with his parents, his brother, his wheelchair-bound grandmother, a dog, and fish. He cannot stand the woman supervising his MA thesis, his family, his acquaintances, or his hometown, and he also has problems with his girlfriend. Hard to say what sets the avalanche of events in motion. It might be a meeting with a friend from high school, the vast quantities of beer they drink together, or his failed attempt to get closer to Agata. One way or another, halfway through the day, a drunk and tired Maciek loses contact with reality. At one point he crosses into another dimension… Offbeat is utterly contemporary, dynamic, witty, ironic prose, using sarcasm and the grotesque; it is astonishing and ingenious, proving the author’s wild imagination. He fascinates us with the accumulation of the absurd, and entertains us with the grotesque. “Dazzlingly skillful.” Dariusz Nowacki, Gazeta Wyborcza “This is a treasure for anyone who expects books to be thought-provoking and keenly provocative. Highly recommended.” Gabriel Wiktor Kamiński, Ksiazka.net.pl “I believe in humor, self-deprecation, and laughter.” Ignacy Karpowicz, in an interview for Polityka Target market 29 Lovers of Ignacy Karpowicz’s work, readers of ambitious contemporary prose. FI C T I O N Ignacy Karpowicz Sonka Sońka Description Sońka is an intimate story with two main protagonists and several time frames. Through a twist of fate, Ignacy Grycowski, a fashionable young theater director, ends up in the middle of nowhere, in the small Polish village where Sonia lives. The old woman invites him in for a cup of milk; they begin to talk, and Ignacy learns the story of her life. This is the story of a tragic love affair during World War II – the love of a young and beautiful Sonia for an SS officer, Joachim. A love that was obviously forbidden, shameful, and doomed to failure. Joachim was a fascist and a murderer of Jews. For Sonia, he was a blond-haired lover, a way out from the cruelty of her family and her village. The village is very naturalistically portrayed, the life of the woman is less important than that of the animals who give food. Ignacy is inspired to write a play, and at the same time is moved to consider himself and his fate... A very interesting, original, and ambiguous love story of a simple girl and an SS officer. It is about the interest in such stories, which challenge our ideas about the war, as indicated by the success of W. Smarzowski’s film Róża, and Jan Gross’s controversial books. Another advantage is the author himself, being a past winner of the Polityka Passport award. Date of publication: forthcoming Pages: to come Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World Target market Readers of Karpowicz and of fine novels in general, journalists, literary critics, people interested in literary games and writer who play with form, and those interested in the history of World War II. 30 FI C T I O N Jarosław Klejnocki Jarosław Klejnocki (born 1963) is a writer, poet, essayist and literary critic, the author of a detective novel entitled Posers’ Cape (2005) and the autobiographical work How I Didn’t Become a Hobo (2002). He works at the Polish Studies Department of the University of Warsaw. He is also the author of a few volumes of poetry, including: Taming; The Open City; Mr Hyde; Reporters, Photographers, and Haunted Lovers; Treasures of the Last Days, collections of essays (Wormwood and other Sidewalk Essays; Literature in the Time of the Plague), literary criticism (including No Utopia? On the Poetry of Adam Zagajewski), an anthology (“Brulion” and the Independents — Part II of the Following Wojaczek anthology, as well as You Have Your Poets — with Paweł Dunin-Wąsowicz and Krzysztof Varga). He has published sketches, articles and essays in foreign and domestic periodicals, including The Chicago Review, Die Horen, Tygodnik Powszechny, Polityka, Gazeta Wyborcza, Opcja, and Kresy. His previous book, Posers’ Cape, was among the finalists for the 3rd High Calibre Award for best Polish detective novel or thriller published in the year 2005. 31 FI C T I O N Jarosław Klejnocki Death Options Opcje na śmierć Keynote The long-awaited third installment of the adventures of Commissioner Ireneusz Nawrocki. Sales points •A story full of bloodcurdling suspense and surprising plot twists, drawing from the finest tradition of detective novels. Description Date of publication: 2013 Pages: to come Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World In the Mazury Province during the times of the famous “white squall” a sailboat overturns sinking with all hands on deck. The event is classified as an accident. A prosecutor who knows one of the victims – a high‑ranking bank employee – has a different opinion. The prosecutor uses her connections to get in touch with Commissioner Nawrocki, who unofficially takes on the case. After some initial investigations, the commissioner stumbles onto the trail of some murky affairs and concealments tied to the famous “options game” played by banks and various companies, and in particular, a secret options game of ultimate risk – “death options.” The deeper he goes into the investigation, however, the more mysteries appear. One thing is certain: the bank was in dire straits, something rotten was going on, as indicated by the relationships between the people on the cruise, which were remarkably complex and mysterious. The commissioner is convinced that the sinking in the “white squall” could have been a murder. Thus begins a semi-formal investigation, with the consent of the influential persecutor. Target market Lovers of contemporary popular literature, detective novels, and contemporary Polish prose. 32 FI C T I O N Piotr Kobza Piotr Kobza (b. 1975) — a specialist in international relations and the European Union. He has been in the diplomatic service since 2006, recently in the Polish Embassy in Oslo. 33 FI C T I O N Piotr Kobza Polish Retreat Polskie rekolekcje Keynote A fine book with a refined sense of humor that tells of an unconventional bishop whose every decision is not greeted with open arms… Sales points •The brilliant debut by a young political scientist who knows what a taboo is Description Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 328 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World A young bishop, a Vatican clerk and man of the world, is brought to parish in the Eastern wilds of Poland that has been forsaken by both God and man. Moved by the situation he finds there, he decides to introduce certain changes, and does so in a way that is quite unconventional for a man of the cloth. Plenty of amusing incidents result, all in the vein of the classic comedies. The end, however, justifies the means. Will the ambitious priest manage to overcome the backwater conservatism and sluggishness, will he be able to deal with his personal crises? Target market Readers of contemporary prose, those wanting to read about the problems of the Church, or searching for insight into “hermetic environments.” 34 FI C T I O N Włodzimierz Kowalewski Włodzimierz Kowalewski (b. 1956) – one of the most interesting Polish prose writers of the decade past. A literary critic and radio personality. Tied to the Borussi group – an association and journal (which he co-edits) describing and characterizing the multicultural heritage of what was once Eastern Prussia. He has published two volumes of poetry, three volumes of short stories, and two novels. Return to Breitenheide and God Bless! were NIKE Literary Award nominees in 1998 and 2001. 35 FI C T I O N Włodzimierz Kowalewski Moral People Ludzie moralni Keynote From the dramatic to the grotesque – a merciless portrait of today’s Poland Sales points •A long-awaited novel by one of Poland’s most fascinating contemporary writers •A two-times nominee for the prestigious NIKE Literary Award Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 364 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World English sample available The year is 1989. For some the end of the old world, for others the beginning of real life. What has changed since then? In his latest novel Kowalewski searches for an answer to this question. A porn actress, a brilliant physicist, the country’s most influential journalist, indestructible secret service agents – these are only some of the colorful figures that appear in this book. The main protagonists are a financial tycoon at the top of the Forbes list and his peer: a loser, idler, and malcontent, a “scribbler from Olsztyn,” hired to write the millionaire’s biography. Their fortunes intertwine, until both are caught in a complex plot, one which aptly reflects the new morality in Poland. Moral People is a meditation on people’s choices and their ethical values; but above all it is a tale of Polish society in the spirit of Gombrowicz. “Kowalewski’s novel gives us a great deal of food for thought. It opens our eyes to many painful truths. It delves, but never gets tiresome. I began reading in the evening, and the author’s style kept me going to the final pages all through the night…” Urszula Witkowska, Magazyn Literacki Książki “Kowalewski combines concision and richness, simplicity and mystery, pulling us into the story, and giving us pause for thought.” Przemysław Czapliński Target market Readers of intelligent contemporary prose, those interested in contemporary life. 36 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Maicher Katarzyna Maicher (b. 1980) is an English literature graduate. Her short stories have appeared in a variety of journals. She received an award in the Journal – Day after Day competition (2008). 37 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Maicher Persimmon Persymona Keynote A mother, a father, a daughter, and a house. A whole unexpected world behind these closed doors... Sales points •A powerful debut •A new voice in Polish prose Description Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 260 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World The mysterious world of childhood, growing pains, and the difficulties of adulthood. A seemingly happy household which turns out to be hell on earth. A little girl – one of the narrators of the novel – longs for love and attention from her parents. She quickly becomes convinced, however, that her house is a battlefield between two quarreling genders. He father is an overworked psychiatric doctor whose male egoism prevents him from noticing the pain he inflicts on those around him. He trusts in logic and medical knowledge, but is utterly unable to help his wife, who is retreating into madness. Her mother is a sensitive and schizophrenic painter. In all of this the daughter observes her mother’s progressive illness, and then her failed convalescence. Small wonder that her entry to adulthood lacks any support; she grows up with the conviction that she has only herself to rely on. Her only saving grace is femininity. Femininity is a guarantee of extraordinary sensitivity, joy in the simplest of things, and faith in the magic of the world, colors, animals, and plants. This self-portrait of a woman is told from two perspectives: that of a little girl who becomes a teenager, and that of a mother and wife pushed into the phantasmagorical world of madness – a result of rejection, and lack of love. “Flawlessly composed and brilliantly written, in a language as precise as a scalpel. The descriptions of the outer world sometimes recall the remarkable exactitude of Bruno Schulz, and the inner world has the flavor of Marcel Proust. […] A splendidly literary work.” Klemens Górski, poet and essayist Target market Readers of contemporary prose, women’s literature, novels of manners, and psychological works. 38 FI C T I O N Magdalena Miecznicka Magdalena Miecznicka (b. 1977) – she’s a prose writer and a publicist. She lives in Warsaw with her husband and two children. Her debut novel A Wondrous Carrer of Magda M was published by Wydawnictwo Literackie in 2009 and in 2012 her second novel Fury. 39 FI C T I O N Magdalena Miecznicka Fury Złość Keynote Magdalena Miecznicka’s second book – a stylish and compelling novel with a backdrop of family and romantic dramas – is modern literature in the tradition of Western writers: Françoise Sagan, Margaret Atwood, and Alice Munro. Sales points •An intricate novel with both feet planted firmly in the present, Miecznicka’s novel will appeal to a wide range of readers. Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 220 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World English synopsis available English sample available Description Marta is a sharp twenty year old with a bundle of complexes: she reads the classics, speaks a handful of languages, and has a tendency toward self-destruction. Raised by her mother, she is unable to forgive her father for leaving the family for another woman and his career. However, when father and his second wife invite her on a luxury vacation on his yacht, she agrees. Also on the journey is Maja, the niece of her mother‑in‑law, and her boyfriend Brian. They set off on an idyllic trip around the bays of the Mediterranean Sea. But nothing here is what it seems: this superficially innocent journey turns out to be a real lesson in life… “When I recall that summer, pride is the first thing to emerge from the mental haze. Pride that I allowed anger overtake me, and pride that it turned me into someone else. Someone tougher and meaner. An adult. But next come the doubts.” (A fragment from the book) Target market Female readers of all ages, from teenagers to mature women. Readers of psychological dramas. Lovers of contemporary prose, good women’s literature, and multi-layered novels. 40 FI C T I O N Magdalena Miecznicka The Marvelous Career of Magda M. Cudowna kariera Magdy M. Keynote Intriguing, original debut that alludes to the most up to date worldwide trends and literary ideas. A marvellous read! Sales points •The provocative story of a young woman entering the state of “being oneself”, or joining the world of adults (a world of high finance and personal ties), becoming a fullblooded woman – based on the story of the attractive, ambitious, educated, financially comfortable thirty-something. Description Date of publication: 2009 Pages: 262 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World English synopsis available English sample available Magda, a graduate in finance living in Warsaw but traveling all round the world, can afford anything – she has a good job, many friends, a comfortable flat, and a bank account that is always full. But material comfort is not enough to stop her from experiencing the state of being suspended in an emotional vacuum. Hungry to love and be loved, she seeks new experiences. And these were always few and far between. Magda describes, among other experiences, her parting with innocence – a romance with a mature man whom she fascinated as a young alluring teenage lover and all the other recognised strains of romance. The novel is in some sense a literary “guide” to the art of loving, flirting, the art of life, how an adolescent can become a full-blooded adored woman. Magda tries out for herself all the stages and “methods” of arriving at the world of adults – a naïve belief in ideals, throwing herself into the whirlpool of professional duties or carefully guarding against the emotional moment of weakness that causes us to fall crazily in love again. The memory teaches Magda what to avoid or what kind of choices to make, although life is still able to surprise her with an unexpected turn of events… Target market Female readers of all ages, from teenagers to mature women. Readers of psychological dramas. Lovers of contemporary prose, good women’s literature, and multi-layered novels. 41 FI C T I O N Kazimierz Orłoś Wydawnictwo Literackie represents translation rights to the following titles by Kazimierz Orłoś 42 FI C T I O N Kazimierz Orłoś Kazimierz Orłoś (b. 1935), pseudonym: Maciej Jordan – an outstanding Polish writer, film and television scriptwriter, playwright, author of radio plays, and journalist. He collaborated with Radio Free Europe, published in Kultura and Plus magazines. In Poland he was censored. After the fall of the People’s Republic he collaborated with Solidarność weekly, Gazeta Wyborcza, Rzeczpospolita, Życie, and Gazeta Polska dailies. In 1970 he received the Kościelski Foundation Award for Dark Trees. In 2006 his book of short fiction entitled The Girl from the Porch was honored with the New Books Award, and a year later, with the Warmia and Mazury Literary Award. Author photograph © Krzysztof Dubiel Polish President Lech Kaczyński presented him with the Commander’s Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta on 3 May 2007 for outstanding service to Polish independence, for working to bring about democratic transformations, and for his achievements to aid the country in his professional and social work. In 2007 he was singled out by the Arts Group of the Polish Radio Theater for the Honorary Great Splendor Award. His books have included The Marvelous Hideout (1973), The Third Lie (1980), The Blue Dragonfly (1996), Wooden Bridges (2001), The Girl from the Porch (2006) and The House under the Sign of the Lute (2012). 43 FI C T I O N Kazimierz Orłoś The Forest Lovers’ Tale and Other Stories Historia leśnych kochanków i inne opowiadania Sales points: •Kazimierz Orłoś’s personal anthology of his finest stories, previously published only in journals. •An important literary event. Description: The Forest Lovers’ Tale and Other Stories is an overview of Kazimierz Orłoś’s finest short prose pieces, as selected by the author. Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 276 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World Here we have tales lyrical, dramatic, and humorous (“The Camel” inspired the film Big Animal with Jerzy Stuhr), portraying the reality of the People’s Poland. They speak of the secrets of simple folk, their sensitivities, longings, and expectations. The strangeness of events and motives. The stories fill each other in, their moods enrich one another, the perspectives and meanings of these worlds complement one another, and man is always treated with high seriousness and respect, though sometimes with a touch of warm irony. This is also an overview of Orłoś’s favorite themes and images. It is a kind of commentary to his other, larger works, and to his own biography. 44 FI C T I O N Kazimierz Orłoś The House under the Sign of the Lute Dom pod Lutnią Keynote A novel with wide-ranging appeal, by an author who has already earned a following in generations of Polish readers. Sales points • The winner of many prestigious awards • A triumphant return to form by a writer in the great tradition of Polish realists Description A colonel returns from a Prisoner of War camp in the West, and settles down in a once-German farmstead in a Mazurian village, partly inhabited by others who have been resettled. Dangers abound: the protagonist fights with poachers, and is accused of assisting the partisans. His nine-year-old grandson Tomek comes to see him from Warsaw, escorted by his mother, who fears arrest. Tomek initially does not want to stay, but then when his mother wants to take him back to the capital city, he desperately protests; he spends over a year with his grandfather in conditions radically different from those he knew in the city, and strikes up new friendships. Alongside this fascinating new bond that is formed between the old man and his grandson, we follow the relationship between the honest colonel and a young local woman. The atmosphere of this novel is extraordinary – it is a rare description of Polish post-war reality seen through the eyes of an intelligent man who is entangled in difficult situations, but tries to create a sense of order and give his grandson some relative stability. Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 332 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World English sample available A beautiful and finely written book, extremely atmospheric, full of goodness and warmth, reminding us of the marvels of the world and of life, and full of dramatic tension, showing us life in the “eye of the hurricane,” and a young boy’s coming of age. Kazimierz Orłoś’s best novel to date! Remarkable for its description of the experience of happiness in unhappy times. Przemysław Czapliński This is ultimately a novel about an unexpected encounter between an old man and a young woman, a connection that both find remarkable. It is about how their lives change, with the touch of a sensitive hand. Was this a great love? I do not know. I don’t even know if it is still possible to convincingly portray a “great love” in the twenty-first century. Kazimierz Orłoś Target market 45 Reader’s of top-shelf prose, historical and romantic novels, lovers of traditional, realistic prose and recollections of the second half of the 20th century – the romantic plot will appeal to teenagers, the historical setting to older readers. FI C T I O N Kazimierz Orłoś I Can’t Live Without You Bez ciebie nie mogę żyć Sales points •The grandfather of Polish neo-realism •A glimpse of the Polish countryside as readers have never seen it before Description Date of publication: 2010 Pages: 366 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World With gritty realism making a triumphant comeback in literature, a re-edition of the short stories of Kazimierz Orłoś is long overdue. Spanning a period of fifty years (1967–2007), the stories selected for “I Can’t Live Without You” pack the kind of terse, masculine punch that English-language readers will know from the works of Ernest Hemmingway or Raymond Carver. Except that here the reality described in these stories – the harsh lives of poor Poles living in the countryside, stripped of any kind of rustic sentimentality – is more brutal than anything either of those writers dared describe. One story begins with one man insulting another outside a church, and develops into a full-blown tale of family vengeance, with stables burning down, men bludgeoned with car jacks, a rip-saw, and one man biting off another’s ear. Another tells of a tramp named Gorczyca who works so long and hard into the night that other seasonal workers in the neighborhood have a chance to get his wife drunk and take advantage of her in the barn. Orłoś spent many years doing hard manual labor. The stories here fairly reek of authenticity, even while the pictures he paints are ones we would prefer not to face up to. […] A fascinating panorama of the lesser-known side of life in Poland, and a side we don’t necessarily like to acknowledge, over the course of the past few decades. Max Fuzowski, “Newsweek” [Short stories] are this writer’s specialty of the highest order, which you’ll soon recognize when you read this selection of prose masterpieces written from the 1960s to the present. […] Any of these stories is a ready-made film script. Tadeusz Nyczek, “Przekroj magazine” 46 FI C T I O N Jerzy Pilch Wydawnictwo Literackie represents translation rights to the following titles by Jerzy Pilch: 47 FI C T I O N Marian Pilot Wydawnictwo Literackie represents translation rights to the following titles by Marian Pilot 48 FI C T I O N Marian Pilot Marian Pilot (b. 1936) – contemporary writer, journalist and screenwriter. He has worked in the editorial teams of such publications as Wiadomości Filmowe and Na Przełaj. Former prose section editor of Tygodnik Kulturalny. AWARDS The Nike Prize 2011 BOOKS Na odchodnym (2002) Cierpki, oboki, nice: bardzo małe opowiadania (2006) Ciżba: opowiadania i opowieści (1980) Jednorożec (1978) Karzeł pierwszy, król tutejszy; Tam, gdzie much nie ma… (1976) Majdan (1973) Matecznik (1988) Opowieści świętojańskie (1966) Panny szczerbate: opowiadania (1977) Pantałyk (1989) Sień (1965) W słońcu, w deszczu (1981) Wykidajło (1980) Zakaz zwałki (1974) 49 FI C T I O N Marian Pilot Character Osobnik Sales points: •The latest novel by Marian Pilot •The Nike Award winner returns! Description: Character is a contemporary novel, dramatic and grotesque, drawing from the period of the last war. The protagonist, the odd “character” of the title, is a man both truly and clearly individual, an outsider struggling with both himself and his past. Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 456 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World Reading Character is not the smooth ride of a modern car on a freeway. It is a mad rush, a hay wagon set loose from the top of a hill, ramming through arable fields, ditches, stubble, shrubbery, and undergrowth. Every pothole is a jolt, every obstacle amuses or terrifies. You would not be able to stop even if you wanted to. And you won’t want to. The new novel by Marian Pilot, winner of the Nike Award for Plume, is a compelling whirl of events, images, tastes and smells, a full-force dreamscape with nightmarish Kafkaesque elements and allusions to Freud, Gombrowicz, and Nekanda-Trepka. The main protagonist wanders through abruptly changing scenery as if through a dream, collapsing sober and sobering up with drinks. In the name of the sense of metaphysical guilt he has inherited from his barber father he tries to liberate himself from himself, to lose his identity, scratching out his social roles one by one: husband, father, son… Pilot plays on his finest qualities – phantasmagoria, rich, Baroque language, humor, sharp wit, and an ambiguous existential subject. An astonishing and terrifying masterpiece for which there is no comparison in the history of Polish prose. “Marian Pilot’s new novel has been planned – and rendered – as a masterpiece.” — Professor Marta Wyka 50 FI C T I O N Marian Pilot Plume Pióropusz Keynote A bravura novel gathering together all the attributes of Marian Pilot’s writing: a surrealist sensibility, sense of the grotesque, pictorial suggestiveness. Sales points •The Nike Prize 2011 winner! Description Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 320 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World Rights sold: Macedonia (Makedonska Rech) English synopsis available English sample available A splendid novel by an author acclaimed for his creative linking of the prose of the “peasant trend” with the Gombrowicz tradition. The story of the postwar childhood of an obstreperous protagonist coming from a family of rural “paupers” and thieves. His illiterate father, following a prank on a teacher, a case of theft and the destruction of a school blackboard, is shut up – as an enemy of the people – in one of Stalin’s jails. The boy and his mother seek justice. Paradoxically, the need to write court applications triggers off veneration in the protagonist for the word. A symbolic gift from his father – a stolen pen with a golden nib – determines his further fortunes… “A novel about the power and curse of writing, faith in the word and the consequences of being carried away by this faith. One of the most beautiful novels granted to us in recent years”. Dariusz Nowacki, “Gazeta Wyborcza” “The story in Marian Pilot’s novel mixes languages and sniggers like crazy”. Darek Foks, “Przekrój” “Plume is imbued with mischievous humour, piercingly sad, optimistic and deeply tragic, full of ecstasy, aggression and passion, a story told with bravura”. Marian Pilot Target market Lovers of literarily unique and original, unpredictable and inimitable novels, readers dreaming about getting acquainted with foreign cultures, lands and customs. 51 FI C T I O N Marian Pilot Vim Pantałyk Keynote An unjustly neglected work by a contemporary master. Sales points •An early work by this year’s winner of the prestigious NIKE Literary Award. Great literature with a philosophical bent. Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 208 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World The mischievous saga of the ancient and wealthy clans of the Duds and Nowaks, laced with a wicked sense of humor. A tale of the incredible, chilling adventures of some unfortunates who narrowly avoid the gallows, and − in search of answers to the fundamental question put before them: What to do when everything is possible? − set out on an arduous, bold, and danger-fraught hunt for the legendary Vim, who haunts the dreams of all those knocked out of the saddle in our century, an intangible symbol of structure, peace, and happiness. Originally published in 1970, this collection of short tales has lost none of its fiendish sparkle – nor its relevance to the times we live in. Target market Readers of ambitious contemporary literature. 52 FI C T I O N Marian Pilot The New Wilderness Matecznik Keynote A writer’s tribute to his native land, its inhabitants, and its culture. Sales points •Essayistic prose of the highest caliber. Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 336 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World Substantially expanded with sketches never before published in book form, this is a reprint of a book of essays issued by LSW in 1988, printed in the “Wilderness” series of the Regiony quarterly. A master of Polish prose, Pilot speaks of his “small homeland,” the titular “wilderness” – his homeland of Ostrzeszów, which he presents along with its inhabitants in various works (in recognition of his services he was named an honorary citizen of Ostrzeszów). These sketches are fascinating, inventive tales written with wit and imagination, telling the stories of Greater Poland villages, their inhabitants, their roles, and the significance of their work, the fate of the peasants, and about “authentists” – artists and writers of peasant stock. Target market Readers of ambitious contemporary literature, interested in the “peasant movement” in Polish literature. 53 FI C T I O N Błażej Przygodzki Błażej Przygodzki (b. 1975) is a screenwriter, journalist, and novelist. He made his novelistic debut with Diaries of Suicide Victims. He hails from Wrocław. 54 FI C T I O N Błażej Przygodzki With Surgical Precision Z chirurgiczną precyzją Keynote Robin Cook and Alfred Hitchcock rolled into one – a medical thriller that keeps you in suspense until the very last page Sales points •Brilliantly received by both critics and readers •Suspense worthy of Hitchcock •The best Polish medical thriller on the market Description Behind the scenes of the medical and police communities, with a masterful dose of suspense and a conclusion that will leave you guessing, dazzling humor, and a backdrop of modern-day Wrocław. Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 344 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World Wrocław, May 2012, the heatwave of the century. In broad daylight, in the middle of the street, a businessman is beaten unconscious. He is in a coma, and it is clear that his brain has been irreversibly damaged. Shortly afterward a young boxer dies of a stroke. What joins them is the young cardiologist they shared – Hubert Kłosowski. The police suspect that the kindly, though somewhat odd doctor is tangled up in the men’s deaths. Inspector Niedźwiecki has a tough nut to crack, all the more so in that he is being helped out by a drug-addict trainee involved in gangster vendettas. The noose begins to tighten, the doctor is arrested. It turns out, however, that nothing is what it once seemed, the most trustworthy people are the most dangerous, and the supposed enemies may be the saviors… The following events happen at a lightning speed… “A fast-paced, brilliant read. Splendidly renders modern-day Wrocław. The characters are so vivid that the readers begins to feel as if he knows them. The author shines with his intelligent sense of humor.” Michał Olszański “The action begins with a powerful scene, and the suspense only grows from there – just as in Hitchcock’s recipe for a great thriller.” Polska Gazeta Krakowska “A splendidly written thriller which holds you in suspense from the first page to the last. It made me burn the midnight oil. […] Przygodzki has created a colorful and wildly fascinating book.” Robert Migdał, Polska Gazeta Wrocławska 55 FI C T I O N Target market Lovers of detective novels, readers of Robin Cook, thrillers, light novels with medical themes, lovers of Doctor House 56 FI C T I O N Szczepan Twardoch Szczepan Twardoch (b. 1979) is a writer who is Silesian by birth. He graduated in sociology from the Interdepartmental Individual Humanities Department at the Silesian University in Katowice. He lives in Pilchowice in Upper Silesia. He has published six novels, including Eternal Grunwald, which was awarded the Józef Mackiewicz Literary Prize and nominated for the Culture Guarantee, and several collections of short stories, including That’s Good, which was nominated for the Gdynia Literary Award. Author photograph © Magda & Michał Kryjakowie His short story The Madness of Calvary Captain von Egern was nominated for the Nautilus Award for 2003. His short story Rondo won the Nautilus for the best short story of 2006. For The Epiphany of Curate Trzaska he received the Silver Distinction of the Jerzy Żuławski Literary Award in 2008. In 2010 the French translation of his novel Transfiguration was released. In 2013 he won the Polityka Passport for 2012 in the literature category for his novel Morphine. He is currently working on two new novels – Boys and The Land of the Quads. 57 FI C T I O N Szczepan Twardoch Eternal Grunwald Wieczny Grunwald Keynote The re-publication of the enthusiastically received 2010 novel. Sales points •For lovers of novels and alternate histories. Description: Date of publication: 2013 (re-edition) Pages: 212 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World, excl. France Eternal Grunwald combines the virtues of a brilliant historical fantasy novel (comparable to the work of Teodor Parnicki) with historiosophical reflections. Twardoch has reinvented the eternal German/Polish antagonism, culling out the essence of historical fatalism through the metaphor of an Eternal Grunwald. The metaphor of the title describes the clash of the Polish and German spirits, beyond politics and morality. Iconoclastic, dark thoughts on the Polish/German bind have been skillfully combined with a rollicking storyline. A Knight of the Cross — the son of a Polish king — dies at Grunwald. Though he perishes, he will live and die many times more. His death only marks the beginning of the Eternal Grunwald. It all begins with King Kazimierz’s rape of the fourteen-year-old daughter of a Nuremberg merchant. When the royal bastard son is born, his father is already deceased. Paszko lives in the whorehouse where his mother has ended up. When she too passes away, the boy’s only inheritance is a small knife, already bloodied, and a kerchief with the royal “K” — the only symbol of his descent. He sets off on a path which takes him to the fields of Grunwald. All of this is to discover who he is: a “royal bastard” or the “son of a whore”? A knight or a murderer? A Pole or a German? A hapless individual or an common plaything in the hands of history? In guiding his protagonist through the various temporal spaces, alternate incarnations and changing realities, Twardoch presents his own version of Polish/German antagonism. Eternal Grunwald is a dark, blood – and mud-stained tale in which the author crushes stereotypes of the courtly ethic and Polish Romanticism. This was a giant step toward the success of Morphine — a novel which was awarded the POLITYKA Passport, nominated for the NIKE, the GDYNIA Literary Award, and the Gwarancja Kultury. “It would be difficult to sum up all the virtues of this splendid novel in such a brief review. It is remarkably ambitious, tackling a wide range of issues.” Dariusz Nowacki, Gazeta Wyborcza “Szczepan Twardoch has created an alternate version of history, but not in order to warm the hearts of Poles. Eternal Grunwald is the year’s most intriguing novel.” Paweł Dunin-Wąsowicz, Polityka 58 FI C T I O N Szczepan Twardoch Morphine Morfina Keynote A rollicking novel about a man born in bad times, and a debaucherous artist hooked on morphine, who has transformed into a demonic, dangerous, and irresponsible conspirator, husband, and lover... Sales points •Shortlisted for the Nike Award 2013! •Winner of the Polityka Passport in 2013! •An original combination of the fantastic and the traditional historical novel, with elements of political and psychological thriller. Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 624 Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World, excl. France Rights sold: Germany (Rowohlt) English synopsis available English sample available German sample available •A unique protagonist – an unusual individual, an outsider, a powerful man, often a soldier, and aristocrat, in conflict with the modern world, faithful to the values he espouses, but also struggling with identity problems. Description Konstanty Willemann lives in Warsaw, but he is the son of a German aristocrat and a Polonized Silesian woman, who does not make much of patriotic slogans and the tradition of heroic soldiers dying for their homelands. He is a cynic, a scoundrel, and a bon vivant. He is a cheating husband and a bad father. Konstanty reluctantly takes part in the September Campaign, and when it collapses, he joins a secret organization with equal reluctance. He does not want to be a Pole or a German. He does, however, want to get his hands on more morphine and live his old life as a barfly and a womanizer. But you cannot escape from history. In Morphine, Szczepan Twardoch has achieved a rare feat in Polish prose – he has created an anti-hero whom you cannot help but like. Like the great ones – Witkacy, Gombrowicz, Littell – the young writer knows how to show a weak, torn human being enmeshed in history. A crazed, trance-inducing, and bold novel. Target market Novel lovers of all ages, those interested in the history of Poland and alternate realities. 59 FI C T I O N Szczepan Twardoch The Land of the Quads Ziemia Kwadów Now in preparation, the latest novel by Szczepan Twardoch – The Land of the Quads! An Upper Silesian saga of the 20th century: two Polish families, stormy Polish-German relations, a Silesian uprising, and the Second World War. Love, betrayal, madness. And a mysterious witness to history, who coldly observes the dramatic, passionate lives of two families enmeshed in the bloody history of Upper Silesia. Date of publication: forthcoming Pages: to come Category: Contemporary Fiction Rights available: World 60 The Land of the Kwads tells “the beautiful, nasty, sad, humorous, and ultimately tragic” fates of people, as Szczepan Twardoch writes, inspired by the true story of the author’s family. We discover the tangled story of the family on several levels. Their fates are observed by a mysterious witness to the story of the Kwads – the ancestral people of Silesia. He traces the people’s lives. Who is he? What does he know about the past and the future of this land? FI C T I O N Marta Fox Marta Fox — a writer, poet, and essayist, as well as a journalist. She has won many literary awards. She is a member of the Stanisława Zawiszanka Literary Award chapter, which singles out the most talented young poets. She has written over twenty books, including the bestsellers Magda.doc, Holy Rita of the Impossible and Shrinking Silence. On the Trials of Childhood, with no Taboos. Her work tackles family and young people’s issues, she writes boldly and subtly about growing up, and her every book moves both readers and critics alike. Author photograph © Janusz Stobiński AWARDS AND DISTINCTIONS Two-time winner of the Polish Romance Literature Competition Grand Prix. Winner of an honorary badge of Merit to Polish Culture. Winner of a distinction from the Polish Section of the IBBY for the First Love series. FOREIGN-LANGUAGE TRANSLATIONS English, Spanish, German BOOKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR PUBLISHED BY WYDAWNICTWO LITERACKIE Novels The Woman Who Turned to Stone (2009) Zuzanna Doesn’t Exist (2011) 61 FI C T I O N Marta Fox Zuzanna Doesn’t Exist Zuzanna nie istnieje Keynote An intimate, seemingly “simple” novel that shows how two people can fall in love. Sales points •The thinking woman’s “chick lit”. •Before Sunrise for a new generation. Description Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 248 Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World A single night can change your heart for good. After Zuzanna accidentally ends up spending the night with Paweł, neither of them is ever quite the same again. Both have been suffering from heartbreak – she is a young widowed painter, he has recently lost his girlfriend and his parents in an accident. The magic in Zuzanna Doesn’t Exist comes from the characters’ slow realisation that all their expectations have been reversed – after a “meaningless” one night stand, Paweł recognises that he has fallen in love. When he returns to find Zuzanna, however, he finds her apartment empty. A story of how passion turns into love, and how love conquers all, this novel pulls off a remarkable feat – it allows itself to be outrageously sentimental without sacrificing a bit of believability or intelligence along the way. It might just give the old, sullied category of “chick lit” a new name. Target market Young women looking for sensitive, intelligent depictions of love and passion, with characters and language they can truly relate to. 62 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Grochola Wydawnictwo Literackie represents translation rights to the following titles by Katarzyna Grochola 63 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Grochola THE MOST POPULAR DRAMA NOVEL WRITER IN POLAND, WHOSE BOOKS SELL BY THE MILLIONS EACH OF HER BOOKS IS A MAJOR BEST-SELLER Katarzyna Grochola was born in 1957. She currently lives near Warsaw. Before taking up journalism, and eventually literature, she worked as a hospital attendant, proof-reader, actress, customs-office director, and even as a consultant in a matrimonial office. She has also worked as a specialist in training at a democratic foundation and as a baker’s assistant. She likes funny and wise romantic comedies, happy endings in her own work, and jazz — Miles Davis. AWARDS AND DISTINCTIONS Four-time winner of the Empik “AS” Award for best-selling novel (2001–2006), Winner of the Ikar publishing prize (2001), Tespis 2000 [playwright’s competition] awards for “Let me Depart” and “My Cat Grew Thin”, “Two Theaters” in Sopot — first prize for her radio play “Bigda’s Coming” (shared with Andrzej Wajda’s presentation) FOREIGN LANGUAGE TRANSLATIONS Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Lithuania, Russia, Ukraine, Vietnam BOOKS BY KATARZYNA GROCHOLA ON OFFER FROM WYDAWNICTWO LITERACKIE PUBLISHERS: Novels Biting the Earthworm (2004) The Flutter of Wings (2008) Not on Your Life! (2009) Heart on a Sling (2009) I’ll Show You! (2009) The Crystal Angel (2009) The Green Door (2010) Houston, We Have a Problem (2012) A Slightly Bigger Monday (2013) Short Story Collections Authorized for Happines (2004) Application for Love (2004) Other 64 Romantic Connections and Disconnections, a long interview with psycho-therapist Andrzej Wiśniewski] (2002) Tapestry Marital and Extra-Marital Fun and Games Loving Relationships and Break Ups FI C T I O N Katarzyna Grochola The Crystal Angel Kryształowy Anioł Keynote Poland’s best-loved (and best selling) author of popular women’s literature. Sales points •Millions of her books have been sold in Poland Description Publication date: 2009 Pages: 544 Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World exc. English English synopsis available English sample available You may have your doubts when we suggest that Grochola’s latest book, The Crystal Angel, is the Hundred Years of Solitude of chick lit. But just read the book’s first sentence — “Before Sara, on the day before her wouldbe wedding — and it was late afternoon already — spotted her future (would-be) husband with the legs of her best friend and (would-be) maid of honor wrapped around his rhythmically gyrating hips, she was a fairly happy woman” — and try not to think of the opening of Marquez’s famous novel. Having started her career as writer of lightweight, though much adored novels, Grochola performed a risky about-face with her previous novel, The Flutter of Wings, and began challenging her legions of readers with subject matter and literary tactics seldom seen in the world of pop lit. With this, her latest novel, Grochola continues the trend, depicting a woman whose life falls apart after her (would-be) husband’s betrayal, and the slow process of putting her life together. She does this, however, without sacrificing any of the affirmation, passion, and fun that made her a household name to begin with. The end result is that rarest of things — a work of popular literature admired by the highbrow critics, and a new classic of chick lit that women might just find their boyfriends reading on the sly. The incredible success of Katarzyna Grochola’s books no longer comes as a surprise to anyone. Janusz Wróblewski, “Polityka” Target market Lovers of contemporary popular literature, dramatic novels, psychological dramas, women’s prose; inspirational books. 65 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Grochola The Flutter of Wings Trzepot skrzydeł Keynote The dark side of love, the bright face of courage: Helen Fielding meets Joanne Trollope Sales points •Almost 200,000 copies sold up to day. Description Publication date: 2008 Pages: 170 Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World exc. English Rights sold: Russia (AST), Vietnam (Phu Nu) English synopsis available English sample available The Flutter of Wings is the tale of a young woman who has a husband, a job and her own home. Everything is seemingly brilliant, as if our protagonist has everything, and yet Hanka does not radiate happiness. Behind closed doors, when no one’s looking, her life turns into a nightmare that she can’t wake up from. For her orderly, well-earning husband she’s the most important thing there is. Unfortunately, her love is tragic. But when he makes Hanka lose something of true value in her life, she decides to free herself from her cul-de-sac of weakness, fear and powerlessness, forging new ties with the person who might be closest to her, in a twist ending that catches you off guard. This is a spine-tingling, startling and intelligent tale about overcoming your fears, having the right to decide for yourself, and finally — about how miracles really do happen. An outstanding book by Katarzyna Grochola… Real literature, splendidly written. Theatrical perfection… The tension grows with every page… M. Małkowska, “Rzeczpospolita” Target market Lovers of contemporary popular literature, dramatic novels, psychological dramas, women’s prose; inspirational books 66 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Grochola The Green Door Zielone drzwi Keynote The most personal and revealing novel yet by Poland’s reigning queen of the bestsellers. Sales points •Every one of Grochola’s books has topped the bestseller charts, though she continues to challenge her readers with new and sometimes difficult themes. •A behind-the-scenes look at the life of an inspiring woman. Description Date of publication: 2010 Pages: 408 Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World exc. English English synopsis available Katarzyna Grochola has been saying for years that the most fascinating plots are written by real life. As if now setting out to prove her point, she has come out with an openly autobiographical novel – and unsurprisingly, it is a compulsively readable and life-affirming chronicle of one woman’s path to become a writer. This took her on a side-track studying medicine (Grochola was convinced that every great writer had once been a medical doctor, and thus studied medicine to become a writer), through several relationships, a marriage and a divorce, a journey to Libya, and a cancerous illness, among many other events. The style and panache that have endeared Grochola to hundreds of thousands across Poland are still front and center in this latest novel, and though she spares her readers none of the heartbreaks of her experience – the descriptions of her work in the hospital are particularly harrowing – one ultimately comes away from reading The Green Door fortified, uplifted, and filled with a sense of wonder at the remarkable things that a life can bring. As she herself writes: “Every event I write about is real. Every person I write about truly existed. Every love of mine was real. This is my life. All of it hidden behind the green door, one of many . . . I shan’t open it wide, just only a crack. Behind the green one is another – perhaps scarlet? And behind the scarlet one . . .” With The Green Door we have a chance to get to know the author of our favorite books, to understand their protagonists, and to believe at last that real life really does write the best plot lines. Aleksandra Dylejko, “Dziennik baltycki” For years Katarzyna Grochola has been conquering the hearts of hundreds of thousands of faithful readers. They draw strength, hope and faith in their own capabilities from the protagonists of her books. “Super nowosci” Target market 67 Those who adore true stories, autobiographies, or life stories of successful people, as well as those in search of inspiration, who enjoy themes of triumph over adversity. FI C T I O N Katarzyna Grochola Houston, We Have a Problem Houston, mamy problem Keynote The latest novel by the best-selling author. Sales points • A startling novel – maintained, as usual, in Grochola’s dazzling and witty style – which is sure to win the hearts of not only Katarzyna Grochola’s faithful readers, but also stands a chance to conquer new fans – among them men. Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 608 Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World exc. English Rights sold: Russia (AST) English synopsis available English sample available The protagonist of the novel is Jeremiasz, a kind and sharp thirty-two-year-old who has found himself at a crossroads in life. He is a fantastically talented camera operator, but he has shown himself to be too correct and uncompromising to make a career in film. Out of work, he quickly becomes strapped for money, and needs to pay off his apartment. He can’t live with his mother, after all, who is always meddling in his life. Jeremiasz knows plenty about women. Heck, he knows everything, maybe even a bit more, because wherever he happens to be there’s a woman – whether it’s his mother, or his neighbor on his floor, or his neighbor’s daughter, or Zmora from the floor below, or his friend, who you can talk to just like one of the guys. But they all want something from him, and each one surprises him in some way. Jeremiasz loves the single life, but this is a mask, because he is fascinated by women and never ceases to be delighted by them. Women – the true protagonists of this novel – astonish him, and in following his fortunes we realize that he never knows about or truly understands any of them, and that life with a woman is hell, but life without one even worse… Houston, We Have a Problem is a novel about love. Read it and be moved, but also laugh, for it is filled with warmth, humor, and gentle irony, which Katarzyna Grochola uses to sketch her protagonist. Target market Lovers of contemporary pop literature, women’s literature, “feel-good” books, books about everyday life, psychological novels, and romantic comedies. 68 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Grochola A Slightly Bigger Monday Trochę większy poniedziałek Keynote A Slightly Bigger Monday – for every day of the week, for every month, for every season and weather, for happiness, for the blues, and for all of evil. Sales points •The most popular Polish writer of women’s literature •For years every one of her books has been a bestseller •A Slightly Bigger Monday hit the bestseller list at once •Winner of many awards and distinctions •Her books have been translated into over a dozen languages Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 308 Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World, excl. World English •She has won the hearts of readers around the world Description Everyday lives filled with surprising events and colorful characters, friendships, love, and smaller and greater yearnings. Her name is Kasia – she is struggling with her parents’ overprotectiveness, with a new diet, constant hurry and lack of time, excess of work, lack of money, and a naughty dog. She is tormented by big emotional problems, and smaller ones, like a dripping faucet or a broken flowerpot. Every day she learns how to wisely discard her illusions. She knows that not every toad is a prince, and not every break-up the end of the world. She stops to have a look around, take a deep breath, and see how beautiful the world is. She wastes time on important things – such as conversations with close friends till late in the night. She believes in love and in dreams. She turns tedious everyday life into an adventure: she doesn’t complain, she looks on the bright side, and she acts instead of waiting. She is sure that miracles occur every step of the way. She knows her flaws and can laugh at them. Happy women are the most beautiful to her. She is always meeting inspiring people on her favorite city train. She is careful with what she says – she knows that words are powerful. She knows that it is not important where we spend our time, but how. She loves to laugh – humor is her most powerful weapon. She loves life. She hates faking things. She is grateful to have utterly ordinary problems. She just does her own thing. And every one of her Mondays is a bit bigger, better, and more beautiful. 69 FI C T I O N „There, somewhere in the world, it is definitely better, warmer, and safer. Maybe there are more opportunities, perhaps they respect you more, you can find work and have enough to put aside for an apartment and a car. Maybe your family will be better, because you help them out. But yearning will always a part of your life. Because every choice eliminates something that you didn’t choose. And till the end of your life this could hold you in the bonds of the ‚what if.’ Don’t let that poison you. I wish you success, wherever you are and whatever you’re doing.” Katarzyna Grochola Target market Lovers of contemporary popular literature, women’s novels, psychological novels, feel-good books 70 FI C T I O N Grażyna Jeromin-Gałuszka Grażyna Jeromin-Gałuszka was born in Sosnowiec. She has won the contest organized by the Polish Script Agency and the Film weekly magazine. She co‑owns a bookshop in Radom. Her debut novel – Golden Bats – has been awarded the first prize in a literary contest „The Colours of Life”. Her latest novel – Women from the Swamp has sold 10 000 copies. 71 FI C T I O N Grażyna Jeromin-Gałuszka Don’t Leave Me Nie zostawiaj mnie Keynote A charming and accessible tale of a friendship that spans generations. Sales points • Jeromin-Gałuszka’s first novel sold upwards of 10,000 copies • Winner of an award for her first novel, and of a screenplay writing award Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: to come Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World Fryderyka is a headstrong old woman who loves to play bridge, and who one day takes in Małgorzata under her roof. Małgorzata is a young woman at a turning point in her life, whose whole existence revolves around her young daughter, and whose life is being effectively poisoned by Aleksander. Aleksander is Fryderyka’s nephew, a retired judge whose heart still aches from the tragic death of a beloved woman. What links these three seemingly so different people? Jeromin-Gałuszka’s book is a tale that that the reader takes to heart, a world that pulls you in until the final page. Target market Readers of popular women’s literature. 72 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Michalak Wydawnictwo Literackie represents translation rights to the following titles by Katarzyna Michalak 73 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Michalak Katarzyna Michalak (b. 1969) is a writer who was educated to be a veterinarian. She has written over a dozen bestselling novels for women, including Poczekajka, A Year in Poziomka, Summer in Jagódka, The Cherry Manor, and Return to Poziomka. Women go crazy for her! Her fan base is growing at a staggering pace, and each new book she writes swiftly becomes a hit, breaking popularity records. She always surprises, and never disappoints. Since the first volume, the series of books about the Land of Ferrin has stirred great emotions and caused a furor with her readers. This is a habit‑forming series sparkling with erotica and sensuality – just try to put it down. A hypnotic combination of the piquant books of E. L. James and the powerful emotions of Stephanie Meyer and Laurell K. Hamilton in a world world of fantasy! Katarzyna Michalak is a worthy successor to the mistresses of emotion and hidden desires – E. L. James , Stephanie Meyer and Larell K. Hamilton… 74 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Michalak The Cherry Manor Wiśniowy Dworek Keynote Another novel by the best-selling author of women’s fiction. Sales points •A well–recognized author, adored by her faithful female readership. •A tribute to values that most readers hold dear: the family, home, honest work, devotion to one’s friends etc. Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: to come Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World Rights sold: Russia (AST) The Cherry Manor is a tale of love, and its main protagonists are sisters; though they are twins, one is very romantic, and the other very, very cautious – or perhaps these are only facades? Danusia dutifully carries the torch of education in a village near Sejny, living in an old, beautiful manor, which also houses her school. Danka works in a Warsaw corporation and holds down a decent spot in the rat race. Danka and Danusia live in different worlds, but both are lonely and missing something in life – most of all, true love. They do not know about each other – as in the old stories – their mother died in childbirth, and they were separated at birth. Danusia was raised by a tyrannical father, and Danka by a lovely couple of Warsaw doctors. And perhaps the sisters would never have met if the mysterious Karol Miłosz vel Jakub Liszt vel Daniel van der Welt had not appeared on the horizon, with Interpol hot on his trail. The handsome and mysterious Roger also appears, attracting both the twins during their stay at a seaside spa. Who will be the first to find love and happiness? The Cherry Manor is a light and optimistic story that is sure to move numerous readers. In spite of the hardships and the dark clouds hovering over the protagonists, the story is idyllic, particularly in the descriptions of the charming village and the titular manor. It resembles an old-fashioned fairy tale about luckless orphans who unexpectedly find happiness. It has an attractive plot with plenty of twists and turns, and it all spins as gently as a merry-go-round. Target market Readers of “chick lit” novels and heartwarming, optimistic fiction. 75 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Michalak Return to Poziomka Powrót do Poziomki Keynote A book about the Polish Bridget Jones, who learns that it is never clear what price dreams come at, how much must be paid for love and what will actually turn out to be precious in life… Sales points •Each of her books becomes a bestseller. •One of the most highly publicised debuts of the last few years. Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 296 Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World Katarzyna Michalak, in the sequel to the best-selling A Year in Poziomka, will take us not only to a beautiful Polish village, to places both familiar and unknown, but on an exotic voyage to India, while guaranteeing a multiplicity of thrills, surprising plot twists, powerful emotions, laughter and tears, and also splendid tales about the animals without which Poziomka would not be Poziomka. Day by day, month by month, the author weaves a tale of people who contain genuine, sincere goodness. Yet even they are not devoid of weaknesses and vices, as they complete difficult choices, make mistakes and hurt their loved ones. The story holds its charm, keeping the reader in a state of suspense until the final page. Will it all end well?… Target market Lovers of contemporary popular literature, dramatic novels, psychological dramas, women’s prose, inspirational books. 76 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Michalak Summer in Jagódka Lato w Jagódce Keynote A best-selling writer adored by female readers of all ages. Sales points •This author’s previous books have hit numerous best-seller lists across the country, selling upwards of 10,000 copies. •A highly prolific author with an intimate understanding of her readers’ needs. Description Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 284 Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World Katarzyna Michałak’s latest offering is a charming fairy-tale whose action takes place in modern-day Poland. The protagonist is a girl who turns from an ugly duckling to a swan – she goes from working in a Carrefour supermarket to taking part in a beauty pageant in Cyprus. All through these changes, however, she remembers her one true love – a boy who has been wrongly accused of committing a crime and incorrectly diagnosed with an illness. Summer in Jagódka is a modern-day fairy-tale about love, and about universal beauty hidden behind a mask of appearances. Target market Readers of “chick lit,” readers taking their first steps into literature. 77 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Michalak A Year in Poziomka Rok w Poziomce Keynote A best-selling writer adored by female readers of all ages. Sales points •A writer who has proven her ability to really speak to readers. Description Date of publication: 2010 Pages: 312 Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: Russia (AST) Ewa is a thirty-something woman who has already lived a full life, as they say. She has finally decided to take the plunge and to move into the home of her dreams. But like everything in life, this dream has its price: to earn enough money for her dream home in the forest, Ewa has to take up work in a handsome friend’s publishing house. Her job is to find the next big thing, a sure-fire bestseller. And this is where the adventure begins... A captivating story of people who find happiness just when they thought it was too late. It is about a pair of charming protagonists who learn that all the good you put into the world is paid back with interest. And ultimately, about how dreams always do come true – if you let them. Target market Readers of “chick lit,” readers taking their first steps into literature. 78 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Michalak In the Name of Love W imię miłości Keynote Another brilliant and heartwarming novel from Katarzyna Michalak which has become an instant bestseller on its first publication. Over 25 000 copies sold up to date! Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 272 Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World There has not been such a moving book since Anne of Green Gables! Edward, the owner of a beautiful old house on Jabłoniowe Wzgórze, hardly suspects the revolution that will soon transpire in his life. This revolution is named Ania – she is ten years old and has just lost everything… A mystery from the past forces a man to ask what is truly important and if his life has room for a family. This book will catch you off guard with its wealth of emotion and its twists and turns. An emotional roller coaster ride is guaranteed! This is a suspense-filled story about a search to find one’s place on Earth, the need to be loved, yearning for one’s true family, and the fact that miracles do happen. A review from the Lubimy Czytać web site: In the Name of Love is an extraordinarily emotional read which teaches us that everyone has a right to make his own mistakes – even if they are the most terrible ones. Even the worst person, a criminal or a murderer, can turn over a new leaf, weigh in his conscience, and change his life for the better. This is also a tale of the power of love that can bloom between a mother and a child, and vice-versa. It survives everything and cannot be defeated by the worst of evils. A review from the blog asymaka.blogspot.com This is a book that gives us hope that it is worth struggling on, seeking one’s place on Earth, that we cannot give in, particularly when so much depends on us. I recommend it with all my heart. A guaranteed emotional experience! What won’t one do in the name of love? It can help us move mountains... A review from the slowaczytane.wordpress.com blog This book needs to be mentioned. It speaks less of the fate of a woman with cancer than of her choices and behavior in her youth, her irresponsibility, fear, and sense of love. Once again we find so many themes, so many coincidences, or apparent accidents – nonetheless, it has all be very well composed and creates a coherent whole. 79 FI C T I O N A review from the kasiek-mysli.blogspot.com blog Don’t be fooled by the feel-good, summery cover, don’t judge the book by the author’s name (Katarzyna Michalak), because she has stopped writing books that are simply joyful and starry-eyed; she has now begun to describe the dramatic situations that occur in our lives. I hope Katarzyna’s fans will forgive me, but to my mind these books that cover the dark side of life come out much better. None of her books have let me down. In the Name of Love seduced me as well! A review from the zapatrzonawksiazki.blogspot.com blog Are you in search of a real tear-jerker? A book which you will not be able to put down until you have reached the last sentence, and which will linger in your memory long afterward? If so, I recommend the latest novel by Katarzyna Michalak, which guarantees all this and more. A review from the markietanka-mojeksiazki.blogspot.com blog This book seduced and enchanted me; it is both beautiful and wise. It gives you food for thought and encourages you to see the world with new eyes. Perhaps somewhere near you there lives a little Ania in need of help, trying to keep her head up? Let’s not turn a blind eye! This is the conclusion I had after reading Katarzyna Michalak’s book. A review from the recenzje-kiti.blogspot.com blog In the Name of Love is the latest, and most true-to-life, book by this author; it took me only a few hours to read. I began the first few sentences and then could not put it down until the last page. I recommend it to all those who love this author and fine genre novels. Author: A review from the book-and-cooking.blogspot.com blog In the Name of Love is yet another book by this bestselling author. I can say in all sincerity that it is the best book of those I’ve read by her so far. It is a tale of love, and of forgiveness for what has gone by. It is a novel where I wished I could shake more than one of the characters and tell them to wait and think about what they were doing, to change their minds. 80 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Michalak The Ferrin Game Gra o Ferrin Keynote The sensuality of Fifty Shades of Gray, paired with emotions worthy of the novels of Stephanie Meyer – full of dark spiciness, the dangerously passionate tale of the land of Ferrin draws in the reader to the core. Sales points •Every one of this author’s books becomes a bestseller •One of the most popular Polish contemporary writers for women •Brings to mind books by authors of world-wide bestsellers: E. L. James, Stephanie Meyer, and Laurell K. Hamilton Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 436 Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World (except World English electronic publishing rights) •A series whose narcotic sensuality and bravura in creating a fantastical world has no equal Description A dark world ruled by passion. Gods who submit to sensual cravings. And a female protagonist from the Earth who has to survive to render the impossible… The first part of a five-volume series about the dark history of Ferrin – a remarkable land ruled by passions, where there is an eternal struggle for power. Karolina, a young doctor in the emergency ward, has a quiet and ordinary life. Soon, however, this will change drastically – through an unexpected tangle of events she will go to another world, a land she has always dreamed of. Now, in her new incarnation and with a new name – Anaela dell’Iderey – she has to learn the rules of this beautiful, yet cruel world, and come to understand that its fate depends on her. She will come to contend with ruthless rulers and gods who succumb to many temptations. At her side stands a faithful horse and other mythical creatures, born of one of the most lively imaginations in the Polish fantasy scene. Who will help Anaela in this fight for the future of Ferrin, and who will bury a treacherous blade in her back? To whom can she confess her anxieties, and whom will she have to avoid at all costs? Our heroine swiftly discovers that surviving in Ferrin could cost her more than she is willing to sacrifice... The Ferrin Game is a feast for all those women who value startling intrigue, great emotions, and profoundly moving stories in their fantasy literature; books that will linger in their memories long after they have turned the final page. Target market 81 Readers of fantasy books, adventures books geared toward women, and pop literature FI C T I O N Katarzyna Michalak Return to Ferrin Powrót do Ferrinu Keynote Fantasy literature for women as it should be – incredibly sensual, a swashbuckling and moving tale of a land that every woman dreams of. Sales points •Every one of this author’s books becomes a bestseller •One of the most popular Polish contemporary writers for women •A series whose narcotic sensuality and bravura in creating a fantastical world has no equal Description Date of publication: 2014 Pages: to come Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World (except World English electronic publishing rights) The second part of a five-volume series about the beautiful, yet cruel land of Ferrin. Everyone who has read the first part of the series will not be disappointed to meet their favourite characters again. Return to Ferrin, the second volume of Katarzyna Michalak’s fantasy saga, is the direct continuation of The Ferrin Games. Karolina, known in the world of Ferrin as Anaela, reenters the portal of the World of Worlds. And once more she becomes a pawn in the hands of gods playing out their latest skirmish for Ferrin. This time round, however, Anaela is wiser: she now knows how to use her powers, she is aware of the complexities of the magical universe, she has a few tried-and-true friends and the One with whom she would wish to spend the rest of her days. When, however, Anaela crosses the portal to the other side and lands once again in the Forest of One Thousand – but now it turns out that she has gone to another dimension, another time-space – to the epoch before the Gray Death, to Ferrin, where the dragons have been conquered, the ruling race is elves, people are chiefly slaves, and the Highlanders guard the Northern outposts against the Savage People, the Kyrie, and the Nameless. Luckily, she meets Saris, a friendly unicorn, almost at once. It is from him that she finds out that her heart’s chosen one, Sellinaris, is the successor to the throne in this time and dimension, and is preparing to get married. Anaela has difficulty swallowing this information, especially given that Sellinaris intends to marry his own sister, Elanora. But Anaela will soon have to forget about her broken heart, because she has a much more serious task in front of her: she has to save Shadow (the unicorn) from being destroyed. She has to guide her out of the forest. And this is only the beginning of the intrigues and adventures... Target market 82 Readers of fantasy books, adventures books geared toward women, and pop literature FI C T I O N Katarzyna Michalak The Heart of Ferrin Serce Ferrinu Keynote Fantasy literature for women as it should be – incredibly sensual, a swashbuckling and moving tale of a land that every woman dreams of. Sales points •Every one of this author’s books becomes a bestseller •One of the most popular Polish contemporary writers for women •Brings to mind books by authors of world-wide bestsellers: E. L. James, Stephanie Meyer, and Laurell K. Hamilton •A series whose narcotic sensuality and bravura in creating a fantastical world has no equal Date of publication: 2014 Pages: to come Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World (except World English electronic publishing rights) Description Great love, great hatred, and a battle for survival on the horizon – Anaela’s daughter enters Ferrin. The third part of a five-volume series about the beautiful, yet cruel land of Ferrin. This time the main protagonist of the story is Gabriela, Anaela’s daughter. Unruly, impulsive, impudent, and yet blessed with a mysterious power – just like her mother. The girl is faced with the task of saving Ferrin from destruction. Danger lurks behind the treacherous Lanoria, and also the dragons, who have awoken and begun to sow devastation throughout the land. Luckily, there are friends at Gabriela’s side, and also her heart’s true love – the demonic Karin Dell’Amar, with his ruby eyes. In The Heart of Ferrin Katarzyna Michalak proves once more that she is the mistress of emotional suspense and a subtle play of feelings – this book captures your heart, from the first page to the last, in a whirlwind of joy and sadness, passion and terror, which we feel we must ride through to the end. It is a book one longs to reread as soon as one has finished the last page. And then again. Target market Readers of fantasy books, adventures books geared toward women, and pop literature 83 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Michalak The War of Ferrin Wojna o Ferrin Keynote The third installment of the Ferrin saga by thousands of women’s favorite author – an intricately wrought novel of an extraordinary journey to another world, a world of passions, love, and betrayal. Sales points •Every one of this author’s books becomes a bestseller •One of the most popular Polish contemporary writers for women •Brings to mind books by authors of world-wide bestsellers: E. L. James, Stephanie Meyer, and Laurell K. Hamilton Date of publication: 2014 Pages: to come Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World (except World English electronic publishing rights) •A series whose narcotic sensuality and bravura in creating a fantastical world has no equal Description Violent passions, hard decisions, untamed desires – the war for the magical land of Ferrin is only beginning… The penultimate part of the five-volume series about Ferrin! Ferrin is in danger! A sinister fleet of the cruel Lanors is sailing in from beyond the ocean, aided by the bloodthirsty demon-god Luciferrin. Great dangers require special tactics – the gods resurrect the Star of Ferrin: Anaela returns! But will she manage to prepare her people for this struggle of life and death? Will she have the time to save the land which she loved so dearly? After so many equally tragic and burning passions will she finally manage to find the One? Hard as it many be to believe, in The War of Ferrin Katarzyna Michalak writes with even great flair than in the previous volumes of the series, maintaining everything that readers have loved her for – an original plot, sophisticated style, a great sense of humor and a sensuality of description which leaves the reader red-hot… Target market Readers of fantasy books, adventures books geared toward women, and pop literature 84 FI C T I O N Katarzyna Michalak Miss Ferrin Pani Ferrinu Keynote Katarzyna Michalak has breathed life into the land of Ferrin, creating an unforgettable kaleidoscope of emotions and adventures, a world which keeps you coming back for more. Sales points •Every one of this author’s books becomes a bestseller •One of the most popular Polish contemporary writers for women •Brings to mind books by authors of world-wide bestsellers: E. L. James , Stephanie Meyer and Laurell K. Hamilton Date of publication: 2015 Pages: to come Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World (except World English electronic publishing rights) •A series whose narcotic sensuality and bravura in creating a fantastical world has no equal Description Ferrin has not yet healed its wounds after the great war, and a new danger is already approaching – Anaela is coming too the rescue, but is she ready for this last great challenge? The final part of the five-volume series about Ferrin – a finale worthy of this mistress of the genre. After the exhausting battle for Ferrin Anaela is enjoying a quiet and happy life in a ranger’s hut on Earth, living at the side of the godly Sellinaris. This idyll will not long, however – once more, she will be summoned to Ferrin. This time the world is being threatened by the demon ruler Luciferrin, who is blackmailing Anaela in a cruel fashion: either she bears him a son, who will be the next to sit on the throne of Lanoria, or all those dearest to her will perish. Our protagonist is standing before a difficult, or even tragic decision. But in fact she has no choice, all the more so given that the enslaved women of Lanoria are also asking for her help, as they have had enough of their servitude. Will Anaela salvage her love? Will she free the women of Lanoria from the hell of enslavement? And what will the gods of Ferrin do? Miss Ferrin is the crowning achievement of the Ferrin saga, it fairly crackles with passion. Katarzyna Michalak once again shows herself to be a mistress of juggling readers’ emotions. Target market Readers of fantasy books, adventures books geared toward women, and pop literature 85 FI C T I O N Janusz Leon Wiśniewski Wydawnictwo Literackie represents translation rights to the following titles by Janusz Leon Wiśniewski 86 FI C T I O N Janusz Leon Wiśniewski ONE OF THE MOST POPULAR POLISH WRITERS; MILLIONS OF READERS ENTHUSIASTICALLY SNAP UP EVERY ONE OF HIS BOOKS. EACH OF HIS BOOKS IS A MAJOR BEST-SELLER. HE HAS AN EXCELLENT RELATIONSHIP WITH HIS READERS — SINCE HIS DEBUT, HE HAS RECEIVED HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF EMAILS FROM HIS ADMIRERS. Janusz Leon Wiśniewski (b. 1954) graduated in economics and physics from the Copernicus University in Torun. He defended his PhD at the Warsaw Technical Academy in computer sciences. His post-doctorate was in chemistry, at the Łódź Technical University. He works in a company that makes information systems for chemists. He has published: @lone in the Internet (2001), Tension Units (2002), @lone in the Internet: Triptych (2003), Recurring Destiny (2004), An Intimate Theory of Relativity (2005), Molecules of Emotion (2006), Does the World Need Men? (2007), and Scenes from the Other Side of the Wall (2008), Close-up (2010), Blood Flow (2011), My Greatest Intimacy (2012) FOREIGN LANGUAGE TRANSLATIONS Russia, Croatia, Ukraine, Czech Republic BOOKS BY JANUSZ L. WIŚNIEWSKI ON OFFER FROM WYDAWNICTWO LITERACKIE PUBLISHERS Short Story Collections A Private Relativity Theory (2005) Molecules of Emotion (2006) Scenes from the Life through the Wall (2008) Close-up (2010) Blood Flow (2011) My Greatest Intimacy (2012) Other Does the World Need Men? (2007) 87 FI C T I O N Janusz Leon Wiśniewski Blood Flow Ukrwienia Keynote A collection of thoughts and reflections by one of Poland’s best-selling authors. Sales points •An author whose every book is a sales event. •Insightful, warm, and a pleasure to read. Description Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 110 Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World Rights sold: Russia (AST) Poland’s best-loved writer of popular novels and editorials returns with another collection of newspaper columns to cherish and to enjoy. Wiśniewski’s light-hearted psychological insights into male-female relationships and the ways of the world have already won over millions of readers in Poland and well beyond its borders. Target market Readers in search of an accessible bedside read that will leave them with much food for thought; readers of essays and inventive newspaper columns. 88 FI C T I O N Janusz Leon Wiśniewski My Greatest Intimacy Moja bliskość największa Keynote A new collection of tales by the master of the short prose form. Sales Points •Janusz Wiśniewski sketches sensitive portraits of people with whom he has spoken, and whom he is unable to forget – even if the meeting was extremely fleeting. Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 88 Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World Rights sold: Russia (AST) Damian has a photographic memory and a talent for foreign languages. He is autistic. Now he’s maturing. A “sexual assistant” helps him to enter the world of the erotic. Bettina searches for love on the popular dating sites. She has been let down a couple of times, but she has not given up hope. Will she find the love of her life? Patryk has everything he could dream of. His father, a combine producer, ensures him the best education, buys him apartments and cars. But Patryk has another dream – he would prefer to arrange flowers in a small florist’s shop. Wiśniewski is a master of the short form. Using a few images, sometimes only a few sentences, he can evoke the truth about human nature. Nobody writes like him about sexuality, dreams, mysteries, and painful disappointments. My Greatest Intimacy compiles true stories of people who live in various places – in Moscow, in Bora-Bora or in Russian villages – but whom dream the same dreams of intimacy and love. Wiśniewski’s stories show us a great truth: that happiness and longing always share the same face – regardless of latitude or longitude, age, or skin color. Target market Readers in search of an accessible bedside read that will leave them with much food for thought; readers of essays and inventive newspaper columns. 89 FI C T I O N Janusz Leon Wiśniewski Scenes from the Life through the Wall Sceny z życia za ścianą Keynote The Polish Coelho does it again! Sales points •A sequel to the bestsellers “An Intimate Theory of Relativity” and “Molecules of Emotion” Description Publication date: 2008 Pages: 113 Category: Women’s Fiction Rights available: World Rights sold: Russia (AST) Janusz L. Wiśniewski catches readers off guard once more with another volume filled with wise and sensitive tales of interesting people. Nadine is sick with cancer, is missing her right breast and is very much loved. Sylwia sadly observes her acquaintances’ wedding while standing by her husband’s side. Laurienne is 178 cm tall, weighs 48 kg and wants to go through a liposuction. Alex and Wolfgang love each other and are happy together. Stefan returns to the garbage pile he was thrown onto as an infant every year on Mother’s Day… Each of these stories is true. Tales of people we meet on the street, in the elevator, at work. Portraits of people we never meet, and of ourselves. A reflection of a simple truth: Whoever we are, we need a partner. I’ve never met another couple like them. Sensitive, caring for one another, happy. Sometimes during the weekend or during the week when I can get away from the office early, I eavesdrop on their life from the balcony. Sometimes I also hear the echoes of their voices through the wall. For the past five years, often unintentionally, I hear their laughter and snippets of their conversation. Five years of happiness, harmony and joy. Together. (a passage from the book) Target market Devotees of prose of manners, romances and true life stories. Admirers of the oeuvre of writers such as P. Coelho or W. Wharton. 90 FI C T I O N Ewa Nowak Ewa Nowak (b. 1966) is a writer, teacher, and therapist; she writes columns, short stories, and novels for children and young people. She made her debut in 2002, and presently has over twenty titles on the market. She runs workshops in creative learning for children and young people, as well as for parents, teachers, and psychologists. In 2009 her novel Spider on a Bike received honorary mentions in the 1st Halina Skrobiszewska Children’s Literature Competition, while her novel A Very White Crow was named Book of the Year by the Friends of Books Association for the Polish Section of IBBY in the young people’s literature category. 91 FI C T I O N Ewa Nowak Bracelet Bransoletka Keynote First loves and first disappointments, but above all, stirrings of passions – a moving tale of a great inner transformation of Weronika, who is lost in the world of her peers and family. Sales points •One of the most widely read writers of literature for young people and children. •Awarded Book of the Year by the Friends of Books Association for the Polish Section of IBBY. Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 296 Category: Young Adult Fiction Rights available: World Description A charming tale about growing up, first love, and life, where nothing is as simple as you think it is going to be… Weronika is sixteen years old and is just finishing junior high. Her parents are good, educated people. But behind this beautiful facade lies a much darker reality: Weronika and her brother cannot stand each other, their father is prone to emotional violence, and their mother, though sensitive and gentle, appears to take no notice of the family’s problems… Weronika has to deal with this difficult home life on her own, as even her relationship with her closest friend is not going so well. When the girl meets Łukasz on a school trip, new hope enters her heart. Weronika thinks that they will spend the holiday together, but the boy has just given her his place so that he can travel elsewhere. Weronika feels defeated, but has to go to the theater workshops, not at all suspecting that they will change her whole life… Target market Lovers of contemporary popular literature, teenagers, readers of psychological novels, feel-good and educational novels 92 FI C T I O N Dorota Terakowska Wydawnictwo Literackie represents translation rights to the following titles by Dorota Terakowska 93 FI C T I O N Dorota Terakowska Dorota Terakowska (1938–2004) was born in Krakow. She studied sociology and was an academic worker at the Cultural Sociology Studio from 1965–1968 at the pod Baranami Palace. She is also a well-known Cracovian journalist. She has belonged to the Polish Journalists’ Association (1971–1981), the Polish Writers’ Association (since 1989) and the Writers’ and Stage Composers’ Union (since 1982). Since the publication of Chewing Gum (1986), she has devoted herself entirely to literature. She has written fantasy books for children and young people, and is also eagerly read by adults. She has received many prestigious awards, including three from the Polish section of the IBBY. Her book entitled The Witch’s Daughter was inscribed in 1994 on the Hans Christian Andersen Honorary List, and It has been taught in schools. Each of Terakowska’s books has made a big impact, not only among the critics, but among readers in particular – and those of every age. Moreover, her books’ popularity has not subsided, and are found on the bestseller list for years, and even more importantly – are counted among the classics of Polish literature. AWARDS AND DISTINCTIONS Three awards from the Polish section of the IBBY – the world book council for young people, for the novels: The Witch’s Daughter (1992), The Solitude of Gods (1998) and Where the Angels Fall (1999) Children’s Bestseller Award (1995) for Mr. Gryms’s Mirror Best Book of Spring ’98 for The Solitude of the Gods “Shop-Window 2003” booksellers’ award for the most important book of the year: Bookselling Event category, It Krakow Book of the Month (April 2003) for It Golden Ten best books for children in the 1980s for The Lord of Lewaw Nominated for the Polityka Passport in 1998 In 2002, nominated for the Polish President’s Award for work and artistic activities for children and young people FOREIGN LANGUAGE TRANSLATIONS Norwegian, Czech, Lithuanian, Italian, Slovakian, Russian, German 94 FI C T I O N BOOKS BY THE AUTHOR IN THE WYDAWNICTWO LITERACKIE PUBLISHERS CATALOGUE Novels The Witch’s Daughter Mr. Gryms’s Mirror It Cocoon The Solitude of Gods Where the Angels Fall In the Land of the Cat The Lord of Lewaw Other Dorota Terakowska and Jacek Bomba To Be a Family, or: How to Change throughout Your Entire Life. Part II A Person’s the Right Address The Museum of Imaginary Things 95 FI C T I O N Dorota Terakowska Cocoon Poczwarka Keynote A book that shook readers to the core – a magical and literary outsider novel Sales points •An author whose every book becomes a bestseller •Cocoon is loved by readers of all ages, and has broken sales records – over 45,000 copies sold! Description Date of publication: 2001 Pages: 322 Category: Young Adult Fiction Rights available: World Rights sold: Germany (Treibgut), Lithuania (Writers’ Union Publishers), Vietnam (Women’s Publishing House), The Ukraine (Grani-T) English sample available Like all great premises, this one is both simple and bold, and makes you wonder at why no one seems to have thought of it before. In this riveting novel, best‑selling author Dorota Terakowska takes a pragmatic and highly successful young couple – model citizens of the Western world and everybody’s next‑door neighbor – and throws a wrench in their highly-structured existence. This wrench is the unpredictability of Nature – their baby is born with Down Syndrome. With an eye that is by turns profoundly critical and reassuringly empathetic, Terakowska follows this young couple’s efforts to come to terms with the ruination of their carefully-made plans for their child and their family. She also helps the reader see the world through the eyes of the Down Syndrome child, in a remarkably sensitive portrayal that is touching in its heartfelt simplicity. The theme is hardly an obvious one for a best-selling novel, but once again Terakowska has proven that literature with a popular slant can be daring, adventurous, and meaningful. For the first time in my life I responded to a book with my whole body, like a child: after reading the book I couldn’t get up from my chair! Alicja Baluch, professor of literature for children and young people Whoever experiences this story of Myszka will not find it a page-turner, because they’ll have to take time out to cry. Dorota’s chaotic, disorderly, and moving novel has great cleansing power. Jerzy Pilch, writer Target market Admirers of psychological and dramatic literature, fantastic realism 96 FI C T I O N Dorota Terakowska It Ono Keynote Shattering — a painfully realistic, yet magical and fairy-tale novel that leaves its mark on the reader. Sales points •Extremely popular with readers — over 20,000 copies have been sold so far •Each of this author’s books becomes a bestseller •“Shop-Window 2003” booksellers’ award for the most important book of the year Description Date of publication: 2003 Pages: 472 Category: Young Adult Fiction Rights available: World Rights sold: Russia (Ripol), Vietnam (Women’s Publishing House) English sample available Ewa is nineteen years old. She lives with her family, but she is lonely. She dreams of a better life, of leaving her impoverished town somewhere in southern Poland, of love — which will end up changing her fate. The girl’s misty, film-based imagination collides with brutal reality. Ewa stands before a choice. She’s looking for signs to point the right way, moreover, she starts to look at her surroundings through the eyes of her unborn child. She tries to explain this world to him, and justify it as well. Both Ewa and It have a decision to make — if this world is worth the effort of childbirth. An astonishing novel, multidimensional and full of suspense — the author masterfully uses the realistic idea of showing the internal development of the young protagonist against the backdrop of her surroundings. We are dealing with a work that not only “pulls it off,” but which is in many ways innovative. The mysterious, finely-crafted construction and the splendidly outlined, expressive characters make this book a real page-turner. The motivation of the girl who just wants her child to see a tree, or the sky, is very moving. Dorota doesn’t simplify this subject, but she has turned it into a drama, which in turn becomes a metaphor. Gazeta Krakowska Target market Admirers of psychological and socially-engaged literature 97 FI C T I O N Dorota Terakowska Where the Angels Fall Tam gdzie spadają Anioły Keynote An inspiring and uplifting novel for all ages Sales points •Awarded Best Book of the Year (1999) by the Polish section of IBBY •A book that wears its heart on its sleeve Description Date of publication: 1999 Pages: 300 Category: Young Adult Fiction Rights available: World Rights sold: The Czech Republic (Nakladatelstvi Triton), Lithuania (Gimtatis Zodis), Serbia (Propolis Books) What happens when you watch your guardian angel battle a black angel and then fall from the sky? If you’re five-year-old Ewa, the protagonist of Where the Angels Fall, you fail to convince your parents of what you saw, and then watch your life fall apart, as one piece of bad luck after another comes your way. And only when you’ve hit rock bottom, picking up a serious case of leukemia, do your parents believe you, and join you in the search for a feather dropped by your angel. If you’re Dorota Terakowska, one of Poland’s most beloved popular literary writers, you use this remarkable premise as an occasion to tackle some very large questions about the nature of Good and Evil, the distance between heaven and earth, and the depth of family love. You manage to suspend ambiguity for the course of the novel as to whether the angels and magical events are meant to be understood metaphorically, or whether we are to believe the world is one where fantastical things happen. And as if this were somehow insufficient, you add a profound knowledge of angel lore and tie the whole thing in to Bulgakov’s Master and Margerita through direct quotes and thematic crossover. Ten years later on, When the Angels Fall seems fresher and more intriguing than ever. Dorota Terakowska falls into that rare and admirable category of writers who smuggle contents of real importance in their chosen convention. Ewa Nowacka, Nowe Książki, 7/99 Where the Angels Fall is literature of the highest caliber. It may even be the finest piece in Terakowska’s enormously appreciated oeuvre. Michał Zając, Guliwer 6/1999 98 FI C T I O N Dorota Terakowska The Witch’s Daughter Córka Czarownic Keynote A coming-of-age masterpiece that invites comparison with J.R.R. Tolkien and Ursula Le Guin. Sales points •An author whose books remain bestsellers years after publication •Inscribed on the prestigious Hans Christian Andersen List •Given an award by the Polish Section of the IBBY Description Date of publication: 1998 Pages: 360 Category: Young Adult Fiction Rights available: World Rights sold: The Czech Republic (Albatros), Italy (Longanesi), Lithuania (Gimtatis Zodis), Norway (Eide Forlag), Slovakia (Slovart) English sample available Precious few fantasy books for “children of all ages” successfully cross over and are read by more than a small circle of enthusiasts. To these must be counted, however, Dorota Terakowska’s magnificent fairy-tale entitled The Witch’s Daughter, set in a world peopled with witches, ghosts and kindly animals. Deep in the woods and far from civilization, an ancient witch brings up a flaxen-haired young girl who remains nameless till her seventeenth year. This is Luelle, our protagonist, whose lot it is to fulfil a prophecy and thus help liberate her oppressed land from the invaders, as the last in a once-proud race of witches. Part of the charm of Terakowska’s book is that it can be read as a universal parable of the suffering of the outsider, a very specific metaphor for the state of occupied Poland (it was written in 1988), or simply an enormously entertaining fairy tale with enough twists and turns to keep you flying through the pages. There can only be one explanation for the book’s overwhelming sales popularity: its blend of seriousness, magic and whimsy make it perfect for young people growing into serious books, and for older people who would like to relive the joy they felt as children reading fairy tales, but without having to curb their IQ’s in the process. Whether a great metaphor, or just simple fantasy, this is a story well told, astonishing with its richness of vision and yet simplicity of the world presented, mixing many interesting observations or even tips on how a lonely person can live surrounded by crowds. Is this a book for mothers or their daughters... Who knows? Fantastyka.pl The sadness of the life of the Child depicted does not take away the joy in reading. The joy is great, and this means a lot coming from someone who can’t stand fantasy – like myself. The joy comes from the mystery, the vivid storytelling, the well crafted sentences and scenes. All of which equals a joy in having completed a journey. Gazeta Wyborcza Target market 99 Children and young people, lovers of fantasy, fairy tales FI C T I O N Łukasz Orbitowski ONE OF POLAND’S MOST POPULAR FANTASY WRITERS CONSIDERED POLAND’S ANSWER TO STEPHEN KING Łukasz Orbitowski (b. 1977) is by education a philosopher, and by fondness a bodybuilder, who has cut his teeth on the fantasy, avant-garde and realist writers. He writes a dense prose with protagonists standing up against the challenges of both this world and the next. Representing the serio-comic movement in Polish literature, he has developed a dashing, unpretentious and original style. He’s unafraid to experiment, and writes in blood, sweat and vodka. He is one of Poland’s few horror writers. His books include short stories (the collections Bad Coastlines, 1999, Paint Everything Deep and Wide, 2002, and The Dogs of Christmas Eve, 2005), novels (Horror show, 2006, I’m Losing Warmth, 2007, The Dog and the Priest: Against Everything, 2007). He also writes journalism and editorials, edits, and reviews books and films. He is a happy father, and the owner of two cats. He lives in Krakow, and attended elementary school in Krakow’s Kaziemierz, where the action of his most well-known book — I’m Losing Warmth — takes place. AWARDS AND DISTINCTIONS Nautilus Award for Horror show; Krakow Book of the Month Award for I’m Losing Warmth BOOKS BY THE AUTHOR IN THE WYDAWNICTWO LITERACKIE PUBLISHERS CATALOGUE: Novels I’m Losing Warmth (2006) Holy Wrocław (2009) It’s Coming (2010) Phantoms (2012) 100 FI C T I O N Łukasz Orbitowski Holy Wrocław Święty Wrocław Keynote A horror ballad about a country of prophets, pilgrims and madmen, of a city of first loves, of a spring of nine miracles, of approaching catastrophe, written with a skill worthy of Stephen King. Sales points •Another book from the Polish master of fantasy and horror •Extremely favorable reviews from critics and readers alike Description Date of publication: 2009 Pages: 296 Category: Science Fiction & Fantasy Rights available: World This time the action takes place in apartment blocks, where neither devils nor spirits reside, but rather a second settlement. The haunted residents abandon their lives to demolish their own homes — under a huge tile there lies a hot, black surface. More and more people come to this remarkable settlement with each passing day, the gawpers, believers and researchers multiply, madness takes hold of the administration and the media… I don’t want to give away the story, because in Holy Wrocław — apart from the unsettling atmosphere, the vivid images and the believable characters —suspense and intrigue are very important, with their dose of black humor. Adrian Chorębała, “Machina” Nothing in an Orbitowski horror is taken for granted. There are no cheap tricks familiar from novels of this sort, no gratuitous blood and guts fly. Orbisowski has created the terrifying with a skill worthy of the master of the genre, Stephen King. And as with the American master, every scene leads us one step closer to catastrophe. Agnieszka Kolodyńska, “Gazeta Wyborcza Wrocław” Target market Lovers of horror, thrillers, fantasy, and books full of suspense. 101 FI C T I O N Łukasz Orbitowski It’s Coming Nadchodzi Sales points •Wildly imaginative explorations of the darker side of reality •A crossover writer who will appeal to both fans of the horror genre and those who normally keep their distance from it Description Date of publication: 2010 Pages: 404 Category: Science Fiction & Fantasy Rights available: World Łukasz Orbitowski prefers to write about the daytime. This is just one small way in which his work departs from the cliches we expect from horror writing, a genre much maligned by “serious” readers. Orbitowski is wise enough to know that horror is most compelling in carefully measured doses – and has clearly read enough Edgar Allen Poe to know what the genre is capable of doing. The key to these short stories is their careful balance between reality and the fantastic. The hospital that cures souls instead of bodies could very well be the crazed hallucination of a woman undergoing a traumatic pregnancy. A home where many infamies are committed might be literally pursuing an old man, or it may be a metaphor for the inescapability of the past. Orbitowski is clever enough to leave these ambiguities unresolved in his fictions, which is why they are much more than a guilty pleasure, and are avidly read by people who normally keep a safe distance from “genre fiction.” Ultimately, the most disturbing part about these tales of the fantastic is that they remind us very much of the world we know and live in. Reading Orbitowski’s latest collection of short stories, I wondered what was really so compelling here (because it is compelling). The allure of the plots? The sureness of the author’s literary craft? All this and more. Robert Ostaszewski, “Gazeta Wyborcza” 102 FI C T I O N Łukasz Orbitowski Phantoms Widma Keynote History, gore, science fiction, literary fireworks and conspiracy theories, Orbitowski’s Phantoms is a tour de force that imagines an entirely different post-war history for Poland. Sales points • An author with a strong following among philosophical sci-fi/horror enthusiasts in Poland, with major crossover potential • Nominee for the Zajdel Award for literature of the fantastic Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 620 Category: Science Fiction & Fantasy Rights available: World Description Can science fiction that imagines an alternate history also be high literature? Łukasz Orbitowski votes yes, and in this, his most accomplished novel to date, he makes a compelling case for it. Here the Warsaw Uprising is imagined with an entirely different conclusion, without a shot being fired. A famous young poet who perished during the Uprising, Krzysztof Kamil Baczyński, becomes the protagonist of our imaginary history – he is forced to grapple with the Russian occupation, and writes a novel in the Social Realist vein. The novel has three major sub-plots – a mystical one, involving a box with the power to change the course of history, the story of the protagonists, who were meant to have died in the Uprising, and the story of Wiktor, a militiaman who was once a loyal friend of the people who almost participated in the uprising. Will the country be saved this time around? Ten novels into his literary career, Orbitowski is in top form. Target market Readers of fantasy, literature detailing alternate histories, and conspiracy theory novels. 103 FI C T I O N Krzysztof Piskorski Krzysztof Piskorski (b. 1982) is a writer of fantasy and other genres and a creator of games. He made his debut with the fantasy game The Rulers of Fate, published in the New Wave series by Portal Publishers. He has published short stories in the pages of Science Fiction, Magazyn Fantastyczny, and Nowa Fantastyka, and articles in Chip, Magia i Miecz, and Portal magazines. His book debut was the novel The Exile in 2005. He is the author of the Tale of the Sands trilogy, several novels, and many short stories. He has won many awards and distinctions, including the prestigious ESFS Encouragement Award for the most promising writers in Europe, the Quentin Award for fantasy game plots (2001), a nomination for the A. Zajdel Award for his novel Splinter (2009), and a Żuławski Golden Distinction Award for Splinter (2009). 104 FI C T I O N Krzysztof Piskorski Shadowcarving Cienioryt Keynote A troublemaker and a world full of conspiracies – a novel full of astonishing adventures and absurd events by one of the most interesting authors of the younger generation Sales points •The winner of many awards and distinctions •A winner of the prestigious ESFS Encouragement Award for the most promising writers in Europe •A novel by one of the most promising writers of Polish fantasy Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 500 Category: Science Fiction & Fantasy Rights available: World Description Inspired by swashbuckling literature, the Three Musketeers, Arturo Perez‑Reverte’s series and South American literature, this is a novel about a troublemaking cavalier, a hired swordsman who is drawn into a multi-layered conspiracy. The action takes place in a world that recalls Baroque Spain, where the sun is no ordinary ball of fire, it is a mystical being, and the shadows play a vital role in everyday life in the complex Baroque culture. The ruler of the land is an absolute monarch, a Sun King, and the action picks up when a certain philosopher constructs a camera obscura, and then begins showing projections of various objects and figures in public, using the sunlight. In these projections the King is portrayed as the ideal essence, so beautiful and noble that few can stand to look at him. The scholars hold heated discussions as to what this might mean, but a theory quickly emerges that in reality this projection is the royal antithesis. This would mean that the King is in fact evil and rotten. Ultimately the inventor is forced to escape, starting an avalanche of conspiracies in which the protagonist is swiftly embroiled… “Krzysztof Piskorski has shown himself to be an able raconteur, who skillfully moves between the worlds he ingeniously creates.” Rafał «Capricornus” Śliwak, Książki Polter.pl Target market Readers of contemporary prose, adventure literature, thrillers, and fantasy 105 FI C T I O N Michał Protasiuk Michał Protasiuk was born in 1978, but now he lives and works in Poznań. He does his everyday work as a research marketer and reads such authors as Dostoyevski and Pynchon with equal fascination. He is inspired by the transformations of the contemporary world, alternative rock music, and travels to the former Soviet Republics. 106 FI C T I O N Michał Protasiuk Revolution Day Święto rewolucji Keynote Marketing forces, the power of information, murder and love in the big corporations – a brilliant thriller recalling the film Inception and the best work of William Gibson. Sales points •Winner of the Jerzy Żuławski Literary Award •Recalls Inception and the best work of William Gibson Description Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 476 Category: Science Fiction & Fantasy Rights available: World Marcin is an analyst who develops marketing strategies that give him insight into the desires of all the world’s consumers. Agnieszka is a student, once a hoodlum whose housing estate was once visited by the Messiah. Dorota would be an ordinary girl, if it weren’t for the fact that someone has just written a book that is controlling her life. Marek, in turn, is a manager who has taken part in an experiment meant to prove that life is eternal. This foursome of young Poles are tossed into a world of global conspiracies and fascinating riddles, to grapple with the questions: Is history ruled by mathematical laws? What links a Polish 19th-century mathematician with a book that has changed the reality of the 21st century? What mystery lurks within the Poznań Settlement of the Excluded? Will the revolution take place? “The basic attraction of Revolution Day comes from its sensational plot. The author’s inventiveness is also impressive. We are dealing with a book that is coming true all around the reader: scientific evidence of the afterlife through cryptography, statistical dream maps etc. And there is a third level, a more subtle and affecting one, which also happens to be deeper: after we finish reading we ourselves look at the world as a game of hyper-capitalists, marketing trends, and subterranean mathematical structures. This is the nightmare of Revolution Day’s protagonist: he can’t tell product brands apart.” Jacek Dukaj Target market Those who love thrillers, action novels, and fantasy, who are interested in the contemporary world, globalization, and marketing. 107 NO N - F I C T I O N Henryk Ćwięk Henryk Ćwięk is a professor of Political Science at the Długosz Academy in Częstochowa. He has written several books on the inter-war period in Polish-German-Russian history, including a small previous publication on Captain Sosnowski. 108 NO N - F I C T I O N Henryk Ćwięk Captain Sosnowski Rotmistrz Sosnowski Keynote The untold story of Poland’s answer to James Bond. Sales points •A true story with more thrilling twists and turns than the most well-crafted novel. •The tale of a forgotten historical figure whose life remains shrouded in a veil of mystery. Description Date of publication: 2010 Pages: 296 Category: History Rights available: World Who really was Jerzy Sosnowski? He was most certainly a promising future captain of the Polish cavalry, born into an extremely affluent noble family. We know for certain that his career was derailed by a scandalous affair with the fiancée of a head officer. It is established that he moved to Berlin, still before Hitler’s rise to power, to work as a secret agent. And it is also known that he was so irresistible to women that many of those whom he seduced came to actually assist him in his spy work. We are also informed that he was apprehended by the Germans after Hitler seized control of the government, that two of the women helping him were beheaded, and that Poland eventually exchanged him for some German spies in 1936. Now, however, the questions begin: Did he in fact return to Poland as a German double-agent? Was he wrongfully imprisoned for fifteen years? What really happened to him after that? And to return to our original question – who really was Jerzy Sosnowski? Ćwięk has written a rollicking, entertaining and profoundly informative book about one of Poland’s most enigmatic figures from between the two world wars. This is a figure who is somewhat forgotten – and it’s a shame, because he worked with real bravura, in an unconventional way, and very effectively. The life of the protagonist of Henryk Ćwięk’s book could serve as the canvas for a splendid spy thriller movie. Echo Katolickie Target market Readers of thrillers, spy novels, history books (especially pertaining to World War II and inter-war Berlin); those interested in discovering a particularly colourful new biography. 109 NO N - F I C T I O N Ryszard Kaczmarek Ryszard Kaczmarek (b. 1959) – a historian and humanities professor who researches the history of World War Two in lands incorporated into the Third Reich, and the history of Upper Silesia in the 19th and 20th centuries. He has written several books, including Under the Rule of the Gauleiters. The Elite and Instances of Power in the Katowice Regierungsbezirk, 1939–1945, Upper Silesia during World War Two, and Poles in the Wehrmacht (published by WL). OTHER BOOKS FOR WL Poles in the Wehrmacht (2011) Poles in the Keiser’s Army During World War One (forthcoming) 110 NO N - F I C T I O N Ryszard Kaczmarek Poles in the Wehrmacht Polacy w Wermachcie Keynote An unflinching and groundbreaking look at the Polish participation in Nazi German armies and the moral quandaries it involved. Sales points •A subject which has long been awaiting such thorough treatment •A sober and humane treatment of a subject that still rouses much emotion both in Poland and abroad •Richly supplied with photographs and source materials Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 448 Category: History Rights available: World Description There are books one reads because they are important, and others one reads because they are so compellingly written. Poles in the Wehrmacht will be read for both reasons. Based in part on newly-discovered archival materials, Professor Ryszard Kaczmarek’s (of Silesian University) book reveals the uncomfortable fact that as many as half a million Poles were recruited for the Nazi army during World War II, mainly from the regions of Silesia and Pomerania, with their large volksdeutsche populations. Far from settling for blanket accusations of treachery, Professor Kaczmarek delves into their motivations, and finds everything from a sense of family responsibility (potential soldiers’ families were threatened with deportation to concentration camps if their son did not support the Reich) to Wanderlust (the author finds soldiers’ letters from France, Italy, or Greece filled with pastoral descriptions of wine, sun, and women). Again and again, Kaczmarek stresses – and convincingly proves – that the ethical motivations and responses of Poles in the Wehrmacht were as various as there are personalities in Poland. In other words, this is a history book that seeks less to generalize than to show the almost unbelievable complexity of a phenomenon that often evokes one-dimensional emotions. And this is ultimately the great value of Poles in the Wehrmacht – whatever our stance towards the issue when we begin reading the book, we are sure to find it complicated, problematized, and perhaps ultimately shattered by the book’s end. In the People’s Republic-era Poland this history was passed over in silence, and moreover, now we have access to sources that were previously unknown. This publication [...] makes an essential contribution to our knowledge on the subject. Andrzej Kaczorowski, “Wiedza i zycie” 111 NO N - F I C T I O N The detailed research [in this book] has given birth to a tale that delves into a topic as unpopular as it is controversial. After all, the image we had created after the war was one-dimensional, clearly saying that Poles refused all collaboration with the occupants. But the truth turns out to be far more cruel and shameful – some of our countrymen were posed with difficult decisions, and were often forced to devote themselves to the Third Reich. There are still Poles living today for whom this history is a nightmare to recall, or a shameful secret. “Echo katolickie” After 1989 much was written about our countrymen in the Wehrmacht. But now we have a real hit on our hands. Professor Ryszard Kaczmarek’s Poles in the Wehrmacht stands to become a bestseller. This is a solidly documented, brilliantly written work that pulls you in from the first page till the last. Rafał Geremek, “Newsweek” Target market Readers interested in challenging their own perspectives on history, those interested in World War II and the moral conflicts involved, those in search of books that handle taboo subjects in a graceful manner. 112 NO N - F I C T I O N Ryszard Kaczmarek Poles in the Kaiser’s Army during World War One Polacy w armii Kajzera podczas I wojny światowej Keynote The fates of Polish soldiers written into a scene where the Great War is being waged: into mighty military operations and army mobilizations. Sales points •A book by a respected historian Description Date of publication: forthcoming Pages: to come Category: History Rights available: World The history of Polish soldiers who fought in the ranks of the Prussian army during World War One, in divisions that stretched from Pomeranian Gdańsk through Greater Poland to Upper Silesia. Their tale has a tragic dimension – for Poles, belonging to the conscription army necessitated fighting their own countrymen. Using a very wide range of materials, including memoirs, Kaczmarek also presents – as in Poles in the Wehrmacht – the individual fates of people who were, over time, to co-create the Polish army, the foundation of independence. No one before has told this story of thousands of Poles in Prussian uniform. The hundred-year anniversary of the First World War seems an apt time to do this. This publication is illustrated, and includes appendices and maps. Target market Those interested in history, particularly that of the 20th century, of the military, and the history of Poland; those hunting for books that demythologize Polish history. 113 NO N - F I C T I O N Bogusław Kopka Bogusław Kopka (b. 1969) is a graduate of the History Department of the Warsaw University. He received his doctoral degree in 2006. He has published articles in Rzeczpospolita, Gazeta Wyborcza, Nasz Dziennik, Polska. The Times, Polityka, Wprost, Ozon. He is the author of Stan wojenny w dokumentach władz PRL 1980–1983, IPN 2001 (co‑authored with G. Majchrzak), Obozy pracy w Polsce 1944–1950. Przewodnik encyklopedyczny, Ośrodek KARTA 2002, Konzentrationslager Warschau. Historia i następstwa, IPN 2007 (German edition: Das KZ Warschau, 2010). He has worked in the Institute of National Remembrance. 114 NO N - F I C T I O N Bogusław Kopka A Gulag on the Vistula. On Labor Camps in Poland Gułag nad Wisłą. O polskich obozach zagłady Keynote A seldom-explored chapter of Polish history is finally given an in-depth analysis. Sales points •The author is a seasoned historian and journalist, who has written for all of the most important newspapers and periodicals in Poland and published several books • Readable, comprehensive, and fascinating Date of publication: forthcoming Pages: to come Category: History Rights available: World Description This thoroughly researched and groundbreaking work of history attempts to tell the story of the labor camps that were set up in Poland immediately after World War II by the Soviet occupants, and the extraordinary complexity of the post‑war situation in Poland in general. A figure who embodies this complexity, and who serves as the focus of the third chapter, is Salomon Morel, the only one in his family to survive imprisonment in the Auschwitz concentration camp. At the war’s end, as a twenty-year-old man, he joined the communist partisans, and headed one of the largest (concentration) camps for Poles, established in Silesia. A Gulag on the Vistula provides maps, historical background, and timelines, explores the fates of women and children during this period, and provides a fascinating glimpse into an astonishingly chaotic and turbulent period in Polish history. Target market Readers interested in recent history, the history of Europe, and the aftermath of World War Two, and those eager to fill in “gaps” in the popular history books. 115 NO N - F I C T I O N Paweł Kowal Paweł Kowal (b. 1975) is a politician, Doctor of Political Science, historian, journalist, member of parliament, onetime Vice-minister of Foreign Affairs, and since 2009, MP in the European Parliament, and since 2011 chairman of the Polska Jest Najważniejsza party. Piotr Legutko and Dobrosław Rodziewicz are journalists specializing in publications on the media (Media Games, Myths of the Fourth Power), political analyses, and interviews published in newspapers and weekly magazines. Vitali Portnikov is a Ukrainian and Russian journalist who works with Radio Svoboda in Moscow and with the Ukrainian Jerkalo Tyzhnya weekly. He is also the head of the very popular Ukrainian TVi. 116 NO N - F I C T I O N Paweł Kowal Between Majdan and Smoleńsk Interviewers: Paweł Legutko and Dobrosław Rodziewicz Pomiędzy Majdanem a Smoleńskiem. Rozmawiają Paweł Legutko i Dobrosław Rodziewicz Keynote Matters that are vital and difficult, stormy and treacherous – a well-known political scientist and historian holds an in-depth conversation with journalists on the past, present, and possible futures in the East Sales points Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 296 Category: History Rights available: World Rights sold: Ukraine (Litopys) •Bold questions and answers from famous and respected specialists •A book that discusses the latest topics and events Description Conversations about Eastern affairs: Ukraine, Belorus, Russia, Georgia, and the Caucasus in general. Two seasoned journalists and Paweł Kowal – a close collaborator with President Lech Kaczyński and a European Parliament Member. The pages of Between Majdan and Smoleńsk contain original reflections in the topic of Ukraine, Belorus, Russia, and Georgia, and vivid depictions of politicians known to them in person, and to us from the front pages of newspapers. Paweł Kowal appears not only as a political scientist and historian, but also as a traveler and a journalist. This book contains reports on international meetings and behind-the-scenes conversations, prognoses and scenarios for the future, and finally, reports of an eyewitness on the dramatic events surrounding the Smoleńsk catastrophe. Piotr Kowal speaks of the past, the present, and possible future scenarios. A political scientist by education and a politician by profession who spent the past several years in close proximity to the Kaczyński brothers, Donald Tusk, and other key Polish politicians, he took part in the most important political endeavors. Moreover, he has a personal interest in the East. This book contains a wealth of anecdotes, behind-the-scenes events from the past few years in politics, and the most important figures in Central and Eastern European politics seen from up close. Kowal exhaustively presents Eastern politics and the situation in the East, explains it, and draws conclusions that reach into the future. «Paweł Kowal does not trivialize historical wrongs. Nor does he condemn Ukrainian nationalism outright. He tries to see it for its positive potential.” Filip Memches, Rzeczpospolita 117 NO N - F I C T I O N “Paweł Kowal says things that might make us gnash our teeth, regardless of which side of the political barricade we find ourselves.” Dobrosław Rodziewicz, co-author, in an interview for Dziennik Polski Ukraine. Their identity problem. What remains of the Orange Revolution, who profited and who lost, who are Timoshenko, Yanukovich, and Yushchenko, what have they been playing for? Is Ukraine lost to Europe, what does it mean to us? Polish–Ukrainian relations in the shadow of Volhynia. The conflict between the borderland areas and Kaczyński. Did the EURO competition change anything? Belorus. Was Lukashenko inevitable? Facts and fiction about Belorus, possible scenarios for development. Why did we lose the Polish minority affair? What about repatriation? How were the 2008 elections falsified? Do we have a colorful revolution to look forward to, with Russia’s blessings? The Caucasus. Ties between Georgia and Poland. The story of the friendship between Kaczyński and Saakashvili. The history of the Russian-Georgian conflict, dramatic moments in Tbilisi. What interests do we have in the Caucasus? The Krakow summit as the greatest accomplishment of Polish Eastern policy. Russia. Putin. Gas instead of armored divisions. A powerhouse, or a colossus with feet of clay? Moscow’s games with Poland, with Berlin, Brussels, Ukraine, and Belorus. Polish sovereignty between Berlin and Moscow. Smoleńsk. From the spectacular success in Samara (the EU stood behind us in a quarrel with Russia over meat) through Katyń (Tusk and Putin), to Westerplatte after the Smoleńsk catastrophe. The dramatic days following the catastrophe. The games played around Smoleńsk. The breakthrough in the Eastern policy of the Tusk administration, its failure and later turnaround. Target market Those interested in politics, Eastern affairs, and history. Readers of political and historical fiction, those interested in the contemporary world. 118 NO N - F I C T I O N Grzegorz Motyka Grzegorz Motyka (b. 1967) – a historian, journalist, and employee at the Polish Academy of Sciences Political Studies Institute. He has written and co authored several books, including How It Was in Bieszczady. Polish/Ukrainian Struggles in Poland 1943-1948 (recipient of the Przegląd Wschodni Award and the Polityka History Award) and The Ukrainian Partisan 1942–1960: The Activities of the Ukrainian Nationalist Organizations and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (Klio Award). The author of numerous academic and popular‑science articles, published in many magazines, including Zeszyty Historyczne, Gazeta Wyborcza, Polityka, and Newsweek. 119 NO N - F I C T I O N Grzegorz Motyka From the Volhynia Massacre to Operation Vistula. Polish – Ukrainian Conflicts 1943–1947 Od rzezi wołyńskiej do akcji „Wisła”. Konflikt polsko-ukraiński 1943–1947 Keynote A picture of the most difficult period in the histories of two nations – Poland and Ukraine – which will long endure in the memory. Sales points •The first popular-science book on Polish/Ukrainian relations in the years 1943–1947 •The winner of many awards Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 524 Category: History Rights available: World Rights sold: Russia (Rosspen), The Ukraine (Dom Wydawniczy Akademia Kijowsko ‑Mohylańska) Description Tens of thousands of slain civilians, including women, children, and the elderly, thousands of torched villages and towns, over one and a half million people resettled, forced to leave their homelands and their livelihoods – here is the terrifying picture of the history Poland shares with Ukraine. The first popular history book serving as a full outline of Polish/Ukrainian relations from 1943–1947. The author presents the course of the bloody conflict that took place between the Poles and Ukrainians, whose chronological framework is bookended by two frequently cited historical events: the Volhynia Massacre, the ethnic cleansing performed upon the Poles by Ukrainian nationalists in 1943, and Operation Vistula, the forced displacement of Ukrainians from Southeast Poland. The chilling outcome of the conflict continues to haunt the collective memory of both Poles and Ukrainians. Grzegorz Motyka presents these events as the central point of a wider picture, which also includes Polish/Soviet relations and the battles between the Red Army and the Polish Partisans in the borderlands during the war, Operation Storm, and the Soviet repressions, the January offensive, the Trial of Sixteen, and the resettlement of Poles and collectivization of villages that followed. He depicts the events from not only a Polish perspective, but to a large degree from a Russian one as well, using materials found in Moscow archives, among others. “This sums up the professor’s many years of research, but perhaps above all it is an attempt to find the right concepts and words not only to describe the dramatic events of decades past, but also to give them a dimension divorced of ethics, to situate them in the contemporary reflections on war crimes, genocide, guilt, and punishment that have been put forward since 1945.” Target market 120 Wiesław Władyka, Polityka Readers interested in contemporary Polish history, political and military history, heroes of the resistance against communist power, and the history of the Polish borderlands NO N - F I C T I O N Grzegorz Motyka The Hunt is on for the White Poles… The Battle between the NKVD (Soviet Secret Service) and the Polish Underground, 1944–1953 Na Białych Polaków obława… Walka NKWD z polskim podziemiem 1944–1953 Keynote A book on the “forgotten Polish-Soviet war” Sales points •A field of Polish-Russian history that has never before been thoroughly described and documented. Date of publication: forthcoming Pages: to come Category: History Rights available: World Description The Soviets had rushed the footbridge. The crew of the first armored car shot with its Spłonka anti-aircraft machine gun, and the second vehicle was destroyed by a grenade. Soon the partisans had eliminated the Soviet command, and the enemy scattered in disarray. When did these events occur? In May 1945, immediately following the German capitulation, in Stocki Forest. This is only one example – there were a great number of conflicts like it in post-war Poland. Contrary to popular opinion, the post-Home-Army underground was fought not only by armies under the authorities of a vassalized Poland, but also by their Soviet allies: the NKVD, SMERSH, and the NKGB. This was a forgotten Polish-Soviet war, waged by “doomed soldiers,” and it took many different guises. Grzegorz Motyka shows these events as the center point of a vast canvas, including Polish-Soviet relations and the struggles between the Red Army and the Polish partisans in the borderlands during the war, Operation Storm and the Soviet repressions that followed, the January offensive, the trial of sixteen, the deportation of Poles from the Eastern lands, and the collectivisation of the villages. He sees the events from both a Polish and a Russian point of view, making use of materials from Moscow archives. Target market Readers interested in modern Polish history, political and military history, heroes of the resistance against the Communist powers, and the history of the Polish borderlands. 121 NO N - F I C T I O N Andrzej Pepłoński Andrzej Pepłoński is a specialist on police and espionage in the 2nd Republic. In the People’s Republic Poland he was a Lieutenant-Colonel of the Civic Militia, and a lecturer at the Internal Affairs Academy. 122 NO N - F I C T I O N Andrzej Pepłoński War for Hidden Causes. In the Second Polish Republic’s Secret Service, 1918–1944 Wojna o tajemnice. W tajnej służbie Drugiej Rzeczypospolitej 1918–1944 Keynote Real life stories of spies and secret agents, set against the tumultuous period of the Second World War and the years leading up to it. Sales points •A little-known background to the Second World War. •Catch a glimpse of the real-life precursors to James Bond. Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 432 Category: History Rights available: World Description Perhaps few Western readers are aware today that in 1918, immediately following World War I, Poland was frantically organising itself after over a century without its independence. Fewer still will have a firm idea of everything this entailed. The present book focuses on one of the most exciting, and little explored aspects of this reorganisation: the construction of a secret service. Pepłoński can not be faulted for his ambitions in this book – he covers the whole period of Poland’s reborn “Second Republic” (1918–1944). The effect is a volume that will satisfy history buffs with its in-depth look into espionage and counterespionage, while remaining eminently accessible to readers approaching the subject for the first time. Target market A book with great cross-over potential – it will appeal to those who read history books, espionage novels, thrillers, books on the World Wars, or those with an interest in the real-life workings of a secret service. 123 NO N - F I C T I O N Sławomir Petelicki Sławomir Petelicki (1946–2012) was a general of a brigade of the Polish army in a state of rest, and the first head of the GROM Military Unit. In the year 2000 he was chosen as gentleman of the year by ‘Gentleman’ magazine. He is presently chairman of the Foundation for the Former Soldiers of the GROM Special Unit. 124 NO N - F I C T I O N Sławomir Petelicki, Michał Komar GROM: Power and Honour GROM. Siła i honor Keynote A behind-the-scenes look at Poland’s most well-trained secret forces unit. Sales points •The first such interview with a major player in the post-Communist Polish military. Description Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 304 Category: History Rights available: World Old high-school friends meet after several decades for a series of interviews that will put you at the edge of your seat – and keep you there. General Petelicki spent twenty years in high ranking positions in the Communist Polish government, in including diplomatic service in New York in the 1970s, and in the 1990s he came to lead Poland’s most exclusive unit of crack special forces assigned to fight terrorism – the legendary GROM [THUNDER] unit. This is his first interview of such depth, revealing backroom politics that will make readers smile and shudder in turn, the beginnings of his unit and its consecutive hardships; and there are surely a number of passages that read like the most gripping modern thriller. Interviewer Michał Komar is just the man for the job: he is the author of plays, a journalist and a film critic, and his long-term friendship with Petelicki gives him a special kind of insight – and the interviews an intimacy that is rare. Target market Those who are interested in in-depth interviews, military strategy and the behind-the-scenes world of politics and the army. 125 NO N - F I C T I O N Andrzej Leon Sowa Andrzej Leon Sowa (b. 1946) — a historian, many-year worker at the Institute of History at the Jagiellonian University and the Jagiellonian Library. His main areas of research are the First Republic (the 18th century) and the history of the 20th century. 126 NO N - F I C T I O N Andrzej Leon Sowa A Political History of Poland 1944–1991 Historia polityczna Polski 1944–1991 Keynote Andrzej Leon Sowa reveals the mechanics of the post-war system in Poland in a fascinating and ruthless manner Sales points •Andrzej Sowa is a seasoned scholar of Polish 20th-century history •An author of books that enjoy a great deal of recognition, and are now considered classics Description Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 772 Category: History Rights available: World The Political History of Poland 1944–1991, written by brilliant historian Andrzej Leon Sowa, is the first such in-depth work on the post-war political history of Poland. Essential facts form a full picture of a difficult period in the country’s history, among them ones known to only a handful of specialists. “The following work is not a classic academic textbook,” the author writes in his introduction. “I see it as a personal synthesis, and a reasonably exhaustive compendium of knowledge on various political institutions.” Following this principle, Andrzej Leon Sowa tries to maintain some objectivity in describing situations, while interweaving his own evaluations and opinions into this tale of recent Polish history, often provoking discussion, and always – reflection. “On every page of Sowa’s book we find evidence of his substantial didactic training, his experience as a scholar and as an academic teacher. The construction is clear, the narrative flowing, and the quality and quantity of the information inspire respect for the author’s efforts.” Andrzej Chwalba Target market Readers of history books, those interested in the history of post-war Poland, historians, and students. 127 NO N - F I C T I O N Mariusz Wołos Mariusz Wołos (b. 1968) is a historian, professor at the Pedagogical University of Cracow and the History Institute of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw, member of the Polish History Association, the Toruń Academic Society, the Historical Sciences Committee of the Polish Academy of Science, and the Association internationale d’histoire contemporaine de l’Europe, with its headquarters in Strasbourg and Geneva. He has written over a hundred academic publications (books, collections of documents, articles, reviews, biographies) published in Polish, Russian, French, and English. 128 NO N - F I C T I O N Mariusz Wołos Of Piłsudski, Dmowski, and the May Coup: Soviet Diplomacy toward Poland during the 1925–1926 Political Crisis O Piłsudskim, Dmowskim i zamachu majowym. Dyplomacja sowiecka wobec Polski w okresie kryzysu politycznego 1925–1926 Keynote A probing analysis and a fascinating narrative – the May Coup from a perspective heretofore unseen Sales points •A book based on newly unearthed archival materials Date of publication: forthcoming Pages: to come Category: History Rights available: World •The first Polish historian to perform a solid study of materials stored in Russian archives •An outstanding knowledge of the issues and controversies of the thesis, supported by reliable documentation Description An academic work on the May Coup from the point of view of Soviet diplomats. Based on unseen Russian archival materials. 129 A respected historian addresses the realities reigning in the Soviet diplomatic service of the epoch, describing Moscow’s first evaluations and plans concerning the growing instability in Poland, the parliamentary crisis phase, and early operations of Piłsudski, Moscow’s methods of gaining information and their main sources, and the highly unstable period immediately preceding the coup d’etat. The May Revolution itself is shown, in turn, from the perspectives of Wasar, Berlin, and Moscow. Wołos also devotes part of the book to the new camp’s strengthening of power, the building of the bases of its diplomatic relations with its neighbors, and presents an image of Polish foreign policy based on an analysis of Soviet sources. Mariusz Wołos’s monograph fills a major gaps in the history of the 20th-century inter-war period – the lack of the Soviet Russian perspective on this period, and then that of the USSR, an empire with a different political standpoint, whose foreign policy, given its proximity to Poland, was of colossal importance. In his research, Wołos has focused on a key period for Polish politics and for foreign policy, a period covering the months prior to the May Coup, its course of events, and immediate consequences. The author is the first Polish historian to do in-depth research into the materials stored in the Russian Federation Foreign Policy Archive, the Russian State Archive of Socio-political History, and the Russian Military Archive in Moscow, while also taking into account of the Polish sources from the News Acts Archive in Warsaw and documents from the Central Military Archive in Rembertów. NO N - F I C T I O N He also consulted a great many documents in Polish, Russian, and French. He makes liberal use of the research materials, demonstrating a keen grasp of the customs, imperial impulses, and mentalities of the new political class in Bolshevik Russia, including their diplomats. Target market Those interested in Piłsudski, the Second Polish Republic, history, academic and scholarly communities, students; readers of history books and academic studies 130 NO N - F I C T I O N Elżbieta Baniewicz Elżbieta Baniewicz — a journalist, theater critic, and a graduate of Warsaw University and the PWST Theater School in Warsaw. She has published several hundred texts on theater, in Teatr, Kultura, Theatre en Pologne, Performing Art Journal, and Theatre Journal, among others. She runs the theater column in Twórczość. She has written monographs on Kazimierz Kutz, Janusz Gajos, and Anna Dymna. 131 NO N - F I C T I O N Elżbieta Baniewicz Erwin Axer. The Theater of Words and Thoughts Erwin Axer. Teatr słowa i myśli Keynote Erwin Axer, a master of literary style – a tale of the life and work of a great pupil of Leon Schiller Sales points •The first such exhaustive monograph on this outstanding director on the market Description Date of publication: 2010 Pages: 524 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World Outstanding director, founder, and creator of the golden era of one of Warsaw’s most important stages, the Współczesny Theater – Erwin Axer. Elżbieta Baniewicz’s book is the first monograph to deal with Erwin Axer so extensively and insightfully – it also tells the story of Polish theater of the 20th century. It documents what is most important, and at the same time so fleeting in theater – unique performances, sets, costumes, and the roles created by the greatest Polish actors of the century past. Richly illustrated, furnished with many quotes from Axer himself, whether from interviews, theater programs, or sources that have never been published – the director’s archive, autobiography, and letters. “The most important thing is that a book about one of the most important figures in Polish 20th century theater has finally been released. And that this is not a work petrifying its subject into a brass monument, but showing him in many aspects of his life.” Tomasz Mościcki, Dziennik Gazeta Prawna “How to turn a minimalist program into a great work of art – this is the subject of the extensive monograph on Axer, written by the great theater critic Elżbieta Baniewicz. She describes not only the life and work of the director, but also his work system, which she was able to observe on many occasions. The result is a half-academic, half-serious book that remains fascinating – because its subject is such a fascinating figure.” Leszek Bugajski, Newsweek Target market Theater historians and lovers, directors, actors, theater academy students, readers interested in culture and art. 132 NO N - F I C T I O N Robert Brylewski, Rafał Księżyk Robert Brylewski (b. 1961) – a legendary Polish rock musician; a vocalist, guitarist, composer, lyricist, leader and co-founder of the legendary groups Kryzys, Brygada Kryzys, Izrael, and Armia. He is also a music producer, owner of a record studio, and creator of computer animation for music videos. Rafał Księżyk (b. 1970) – a journalist and music critic, author of and interviewer for a Tomasz Stańko autobiography that was adored by readers and critics. He had a hand in creating the image of the new music and pop culture press scene that was born in the 1990s. He works as the vice‑editor‑in‑chief of Playboy, and as a music critic works with Machina magazine and with TVP Kultura. 133 NO N - F I C T I O N Robert Brylewski, Rafał Księżyk Crisis in Babylon Kryzys w Babilonie Keynote Rock and roll lifestyle, nonconformity, with a changing Poland, communism and the free market system in the background… Sales points •A legendary rock musician and a legendary music critic in a fascinating conversation •A long-awaited biography of a man who created a rebellious youth culture in defiance of his times Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 584 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World Rights sold: The Czech Republic (Smrst) A master of the guitar, one of Poland’s most charismatic rock musicians, in conversation with Rafał Księżyk about his tumultuous life, anti-rock-star career, family and passions. Robert Brylewski’s tale is a stormy one. The punk explosion at the height of the communist crackdowns. Marihuana and reggae during Martial Law. The beginnings of capitalism to the beat of techno and amphetamines. Alternative societies clashing with market realities. And the man himself? Messy and chronically late. A reggae lover. The creator of a vast number of paintings, graffiti works, and collages, including those depicting General Jaruzelski. Fascinated by the Theory of Relativity, nanotechnology and history. After his birth it was foretold that he would become a priest. He didn’t. He got music for breakfast every day. Raised in a strange enclave. The great-grandson of a circus manager, grandson of a painter and factory worker, son of a miner and a dancer. A powerful force in the local underground, co-creator of groups like Kryzys [Crisis], Izrael [Israel], Brygada Kryzys [Crisis Brigade], and Armia [Army]. The book contains a wealth of photographs from the family archive of Robert Brylewski, and reproductions of the musician’s artwork. “The life we led was utterly unlike the others. We even looked different. We didn’t give a sh… about careers, studios, the army, or work. This gave us a great sense of self‑confidence and immediacy.” Robert Brylewski “That guy awoke us from musical and ideological non-existence. A pioneer, a precursor, a legend. It’s thanks to him I’m a punk, though neither one of us looks it these days. Read this book and find out that Polish freedom wasn’t always born in the shipyards.” Kuba Wojewódzki “The life of Robert Brylewski, with 49 years of Poland in the background. Fascinating, and at times surprising.” 134 Lech Janerka NO N - F I C T I O N “If you want to find out how the steel of Polish punk was forged during Martial Law, you won’t find a better book. Highly recommended.” Jakub Ż� ulczyk, Wprost “Brylewski’s autobiography is a real page-turner – in spite of its nearly 600 pages, you gulp it down very quickly. Partly because Brylewski is talking about fascinating things, and partly because the way he tells a story is fascinating.” Przemysław Gulda, Gazeta Wyborcza “Crisis in Babylon is more than an autobiography of Robert Brylewski. It is the story of the Polish underground.” Rzeczospolita “Well-aimed questions, open-ended answers, and a piece of fascinating history.” Target market Wojciech Lada, Uważam Rze Readers of memoirs, autobiographies, lovers of non-fiction and rock music. Fans of Brylewski, and his various groups: Armia, Izrael, Brygada Kryzys. 135 NO N - F I C T I O N Michał Głowiński Wydawnictwo Literackie represents translation rights to the following titles by Michał Głowiński 136 NO N - F I C T I O N Michał Głowiński ONE OF THE MOST CELEBRATED EXPERTS ON THE HISTORY OF POLISH LITERATURE THE AUTHOR OF POLISH STUDIES BOOKS THAT ARE NOW CONSIDERED CLASSICS Michał Głowiński (b. 1934) — literary theorist and authority on the contemporary history of Polish literature, professor at the Institute of Polish Literary Research at the Polish Academy of Sciences, an academic with a great deal of innovation and puissance, with inspiring influence, the author of basic texts on Polish literature, as well as of original and important memoirs (including Black Seasons, and A Footbridge over Time. Pictures from a Town, 2005). In 1999 his book entitled Black Seasons was nominated for the Nike Polish Literary Award. AWARDS AND DISTINCTIONS Nominated for the prestigious Nike Polish Literary Award for Black Seasons Winner of the Jan Parandowski literary award, given out by the PEN Club for lifetime achievement Honorary doctorates from the Adam Mickiewicz University and Opole University Winner of the Herder Award, given out by the Alfred Toepfer Foundation in Hamburg BOOKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR AVAILABLE FROM WYDAWNICTWO LITERACKIE PUBLISHERS Other Wings and Heel Telimena’s Interior Monologue A Footbridge over Time. Pictures from a Town Broken Tales. Small Sketches 1998–2007 137 NO N - F I C T I O N Michał Głowiński Autobiography Kręgi obcości. Opowieść autobiograficzna Keynote An insightful, personal and universal study by one of Poland’s most admired literary critics. Sales points •An author of Polish literary criticism that is already regarded as classic •One of the most highly-ranked critics of Polish literature •Winner of the prestigious PEN Club Award for lifetime achievement Description Date of publication: 2009 Pages: 536 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World In his autobiography, Michał Głowiński appears as a careful observer and sober commentator, and a writer able to forge increasing existential suspense. He tells not only of his own personal experiences, but places them in a broader context — his generation’s experiences, and those of the world in which he grew up in and presently inhabits. The times of the occupation, his family home after the war, his studies in the Stalinist era, March ’68, work at the Institute for Literary Research, which was then an oasis of freedom, his first travels abroad, the carnival of Solidarity… With his customary passion, the author describes these political, social and cultural realities, while adding in some private confessions. Target market Readers of autobiographies, memoirs, non-fiction, those interested in history and literature 138 NO N - F I C T I O N Katarzyna Grochola, Dorota Szelągowska Tapestry Makatka Keynote An intimate, revealing, and heartwarming look into the lives and relationship of Poland’s favorite mother and daughter. Sales points •Grochola’s every book tops the national bestseller charts in Poland •Full of photographs, reflections on life and the family, and bite-sized pearls of wisdom. Description Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 376 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World It’s an idea so natural and appealing that one wonders how it hadn’t been conceived before. Take two of Poland’s most beloved and best-selling authors – who also happen to be mother and daughter – and have them compose an intimate, playful and often touching double portrait. The result is something like a (s)he says/she says compilation of takes on events both major and minor, from dealing with Facebook and household pets to betrayal and surviving toxic relationships, seen through the eyes of two women from different generations, with different ranges of experience. Their versions quarrel, contradict each other, come together in surprising places, and ultimately go to prove that no matter how much they may disagree on the details, the love between a daughter and a mother is a marvelous thing. Tapestry is a kind of homage to a bond that is too rarely celebrated in literature – mother and daughter – written by two sparkling personalities. My life was calm and settled. A son, a Financé, a house, a loan, a job, some dogs. A dinner out on the town from time to time, friends and acquaintances. A nice set-up. And then the telephone rang. ‘Hello, dear, we’re going to be on Dancing with the Stars,’ my mother said, which sounded more or less the same as being told that we would be flying to the Moon the week following, or that we would be starting up a silkworm farm. I honestly admit that I originally ignored this information, as I did with other news my mother gave me. That was my mistake. – From the book. Target market Enthusiasts of “chick lit” with a heart, those looking for a good read about mother/daughter relationships, or wanting a glimpse “behind the scenes” at Grochola’s life. 139 NO N - F I C T I O N Julia Hartwig Julia Hartwig (born in 1921 in Lublin) is a poet, essayist and translator. She has written a couple of collections of poems, which allowed her to become one of major authors of contemporary poety. She is not easily classified, but rather treated as a stand-alone, exceptional figure, who does not succumb to either passing fashion or snobbery. AWARDS: ZaiKS Award (1976), Fondation d’Hautvilliers “Prix de Traduction” Award (France, 1978), Polish PEN Club Award (1979, 1997), Jurzykowski Literary Award (USA, 1981), Thornton Wilder Prize (USA, 1986), Georg Trakl Award (Austria, 1991), Ministry of Culture Award for lifetime achievement (2001), Władysław and Nella Turzański Foundation Award (2004), Great Cultural Foundation Award, Polish PEN Club Jan Parandowski Award (2009). Four-time nominee for the Nike Literary Award. OTHER BOOKS FOR WL: Poezje wybrane / Selected Poems 140 NO N - F I C T I O N Julia Hartwig Diaries Dziennik Keynote An extraordinary document by a famous poetess, showing how colorful and inspiring the post-war period could be Sales points •The winner of many prestigious awards, four-times nominated for the NIKE Award. •One of Poland’s most outstanding poets, an acknowledged translator of literature • Entering her ninetieth year, Hartwig is a major figure in the history of Polish literature • Features recollections of many important names in 20th century literature Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 464 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World Description This journal speaks more in-depth of Hartwig’s work and important events in social and political life than her previous works have, but it perhaps focuses most strongly on divulging the poet’s own trials, and on descriptions of her friends, including those who have passed away. She also devotes a great deal of space to books – as, alongside her own writing, these occupy the most important place in her life. The following day Ania and I make an excursion to Campo de’ Fiori, where we delighted in seeing the booths filled with vegetables and flowers. Beautiful weather, a bit chilly, but the sun is warm. We seat ourselves in a restaurant on the sunny side of the street, already filling up with tourists in search of some sun and good coffee, just like us. We lunch in the same restaurant, I order canelloni with ricotta and spinach. The previous day we had eaten lunch near the Fontanna di Trevi with Adam, who was leaving the next day. Adam threw a coin into the fountain and hoped that he would have the chance to return to Rome. Ania immortalized it in a photograph. 22 February 2010 Target market Readers of memoirs, of fine and ambitious contemporary literature, and of non‑fiction. 141 NO N - F I C T I O N Iza Komendołowicz Iza Komendołowicz is a journalist, vice-editor-in-chief of Pani magazine, and co-author of an extensive interview with Witold Pyrkosz. OTHER BOOKS FOR WL: Witold Pyrkosz. Twice Born. Memoirs 142 NO N - F I C T I O N Iza Komendołowicz Elka Elka Keynote A story that Dostoyevsky might have written – a portrait of the Polish Marylin Monroe, full of ups and downs, successes and failures, loves and solitude. Sales points •The compelling story of Elżbieta Czyżewska – outstanding actress, loved and loathed at the same time. Description Date of publication:2012 Pages: 408 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World A bold and factual book, providing a behind-the-scenes look at the legend‑shrouded private and professional life of one of the most popular – and most controversial – Polish film actresses of the 1960s. Successes and failures, loves and solitude, grappling with alcoholism and a cancerous tumor, a vivid picture of the cinema artists’ environment, full of romances, intrigues, and ruthless rivalries. The story of a unique, proud, and intelligent woman, who was also cruel, lost, and storing some painful memories from her childhood. She was phenomenal, devilishly seductive, constantly on the prowl, and greedy for love and acceptance. Among those speaking about the starlet are actors, directors, writers, artists, friends, and acquaintances, from both Poland and the USA: Agnieszka Holland, Daniel Olbrychski, Andrzej Wajda, Joanna Pacuła, Omar Sangare, Kazimierz Kutz, Krystyna Zachwatowicz, Olga Lipińska, Daniel Passent, Barbara Sass, and Nancy Weber. The book is richly illustrated with photographs and documents. Target market Readers of memoirs, autobiographies, biographies, adorers of E. Czyżewska’s talents, those interested in the history of cinema. 143 NO N - F I C T I O N Ewa Kuryluk ANOTHER OUTSTANDING BOOK BY THIS FAMOUS KRAKOW ARTIST NOMINATED FOR THE PRESTIGIOUS NIKE LITERARY AWARD Ewa Kuryluk (b. 1946) — a famous painter, writer, poet, essayist and art historian. Born in Krakow, presently lives in Paris, New York and Warsaw. A pioneer in avant-garde textile installations. She has written twenty books, including numerous essays on art. She was nominated for the prestigious Nike Literary Award in 2005 for her most personal novel, Goldi, which features her childhood recollections. AWARDS AND DISTINCTIONS Nominated for the prestigious Nike Literary Award for Goldi. BOOKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR PUBLISHED BY WYDAWNICTWO LITERACKIE Novels Frascati (2009) Goldi (2011, re-edition) 144 NO N - F I C T I O N Ewa Kuryluk Frascati Frascati Keynote Sincere and uncompromising confessions, and an attempt to understand things that are not spoken of, that are forgotten and discarded. Sales points •The twentieth book by this internationally recognized painter, essayist, translator and writer •The Jewish experience of Central Europe through the 20th century told by an accomplished writer and an intellectual Date of publication: 2009 Pages: 344 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World Description Just when you think you know something about the twentieth century, a book like Ewa Kuryluk’s “Frascati” comes along, revealing conflicts and intensity from a pivotal, yet entirely unknown perspective. Her father, Karol, died shortly after the furor that erupted when a frank entry about the Jewish deaths in the Holocaust was placed in the Polish Encyclopedia in 1967. Her mother, a Jewish survivor of the ghetto in Lwów (now Lviv, Ukraine), suffered persecution mania for years, believing she had to escape SS men everywhere. Her brother planned to immigrate to the moon in 1968, but instead ended up schizophrenic and in an insane asylum. “Frascati” (the name refers to the street where the Kuryluks lived in Warsaw) flows along as transcribed conversations between Ewa and her mother, the protagonist of the story, which grants this family autobiography the feeling of a shared intimate talk with the reader. And though the truths exposed in this sometimes harrowing saga are hard ones indeed – for Europe, for humanity in general – Kuryluk’s voice speaks with such warmth and understanding that the reader’s overwhelming response is to believe that hope exists in spite of the cruelest adversity. A sincere and shattering tale. [...] And one that is outstanding from a literary perspective, for although a stream-of-consciousness novel can’t be written about the lives of those who survived, Kuryluk proves that you can give testimony to the Holocaust and search for new forms to do it in. Jan Strzalka, “Polityka” “Frascati” is a novel about how little we might know about the people closest to us, even those we live with. Agata Pyzik, “Lampa” Target market Lovers of Ewa Kuryluk’s work, readers of memoirs, autobiographies, those who prefer non-fiction, those interested in post-war Polish history and Jewish issues, and those who would like to discover a slice of unfamiliar history. 145 NO N - F I C T I O N Ewa Kuryluk Goldi Goldi Keynote The first installment of an autobiography that encapsulates Poland’s troubled history in a single woman. Sales points •The book was a finalist for the prestigious Nike Award. •Part one of a saga whose third volume is currently being written. Description Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 208 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World Artist and art historian, a writer of Jewish extraction residing in Paris, Ewa Kuryluk is a figure of many faces. Goldi is chiefly the story of her father – a Polish Minister of Culture, Polish Ambassador in Vienna, and one of the Righteous among Nations – and of his relationship with his daughter. The family is presented here as a kind of island refuge against the turmoil of the outside world. Compelling, authentic and sincere, this book is above a view of personal and private history seen through the eyes of a young girl. The focus therefore shifts from events of world significance to accounts of strolls through Vienna, a dress purchased for a chess convention, and meetings with a writer whose works were never to be read, having been devoured by a precocious little guinea pig named Goldi. The book is richly furnished with photographs from the time period. [Ewa Kuryluk’s] family concentrates all the most important things, as if through a lens. Great love, terrible disease, the beauty of coincidence, flourish and sorrow, misery and ecstasy, whispers and screams, absurdity and abundance. Agnieszka Drotkiewicz, “Lampa” This may be a personal memoir, but its significance stretches far beyond the frame of a family story. Goldi is perhaps the most intimate of Ewa Kuryluk’s books to date. Marek Radziwon, “Gazeta Wyborcza” Target market Those interested in memoirs and historical sagas, post-war Polish history and Jewish issues, those who would like a first-hand view of a complex historical time period. 146 NO N - F I C T I O N Dorota Masłowska Dorota Masłowska (b. 1983) is one of the most famous young writers in Poland, having taken the literary market by storm. She grew up in Wejherów. She began studying psychology at Gdańsk University, then moved to Warsaw to attend a cultural studies program. Her first book, Snow White and Russian Red, advertised as “Poland’s first thug novel,” received glowing reviews from Jerzy Pilch and Marcin Świetlicki, was promoted by Robert Leszczyński on the Idol television program, and became a bestseller (over 120,000 copies sold), while raising a good deal of controversy. Snow White… won its author the Polityka Passport in the literature category, and a nomination for the Nike literary award. The novel has been translated into many European languages. Author photograph © Marcin Nowak 2005 saw the release of Masłowska’s second novel, The Queen’s Peacock, for which she received the Nike Literary Award in 2006. In 2006 Masłowska published her debut drama, Two Poor Romanians Speaking Polish, which was presented to the public in the form of a rehearsed reading at TR Warsaw (previously the Rozmaitości Theater). Masłowska wrote a column for Przekrój, published under the title “A Diary from the Land of Glitter,” and reviews books for Wysokie Obcasy. She has also worked with Lampa magazine since she began her career. In 2008 she published her most recent drama, entitled Everything’s All Right Between Us. In early 2009 she left (with her daughter) for Berlin on a year-long DAAD scholarship. 147 NO N - F I C T I O N Agnieszka Drotkiewicz Agnieszka Drotkiewicz (b. 1981) has written the novels Paris London Dachau, The Same for Me, and Now. She graduated in cultural relations from the Oriental Studies Institute of Warsaw University, and from cultural studies at the same school. She works regularly with Lampa magazine. 148 NO N - F I C T I O N Dorota Masłowska, Agnieszka Drotkiewicz The World Soul Dusza światowa Keynote The first book-length interview with the most fascinating writer of the younger generation. Dorota Masłowska: an author whose every book attracts a readership, draws like a magnet, and avoids every pigeonhole. Sales points •Masłowska and Drotkiewicz: two women, two writers who have known each other for years, with a profound mutual understanding – this makes their conversation true and sincere, and decidedly beyond what we expect from a standard interview. •Dorota Masłowska speaks privately and critically about herself and the world: individually and unpretentiously. Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 234 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World 149 •Masłowska’s judgments, opinions, eccentricity, and her critical accounts of reality cannot fail to interest the reader. Description Dorota Masłowska – one of the most spectacular debutantes in recent years – speaks with Agnieszka Drotkiewicz, a writer and editor of Lampa. This is the first time she speaks of herself so frankly, without unnecessary cynicism – of her life in Wejherów, her love of the sea, which is probably in her genes, her toxic love for the city, her reluctance to ride the metro at rush hour, the magic of the crowd… But also about her books – the early and later ones, past and future. Masłowska reveals new and unseen worlds – the writer’s words give us a picture of her life and work, but also of the young artist herself: creative, and increasingly mature and self-aware. The everyday Dorota, and Dorota the writer – the former is fairly nice and devoid of charisma, the second can sometimes be terrifying. In The World Soul the young writer addresses many contemporary issues, such as the primitivization of art, which increasingly serves up ready-made world views, the antagonism of the media, which is always ready for a conflict, not for dialogue, freedom and the lack thereof. Sometimes brutal, but always sincere, she speaks of daily life in Poland, politics, consumerism, the drawbacks of being famous, the increasingly superficial contact between people, the general dissipation, the obsession with creativity, fashion, and also… professional ailments. Why isn’t she a feminist, and what does it mean that her brain has not been gender-oriented? Why does she no longer believe that stains and dirt lend clothing charm and character? Since when has she begun ironing her clothes again? Why can’t she stand anecdotes and recollections? And what is “eating with a burst,” which she so adores? NO N - F I C T I O N “I’m quite convinced that you have to invest in analogue contacts and in an analogue lifestyle, because no one can predict the fate of Facebook and those ephemeral relationships and emotions based on ‘Like!’, and the substances produced in the brain when you get absorbed in it. It all seems monstrously dangerous to me, and I think that soon the ability to hold a conversation will signal great potential. Because instead of talking, we’ll just click ‘Like!’ ” “Personally I love dreams, I’m a great fan of them, I think that people underestimate their ghostly power.” “This book is a question: can an international book be written, free of a national context, history, and consequently, a particular culture, a question as to whether one can write a „general book’.” (Fragments from the book) Target market: The numerous admirers of Dorota Masłowska’s work, readers of memoirs and long interviews; those interested in literature, and contemporary life. 150 NO N - F I C T I O N Franceska Michalska Franceska Michalska was born in 1923 in Kamienic Podolski. Her childhood years were spent in the era when the new Soviet rule was taking shape, when a new social order was being introduced, which turned out to be no more than a ruthless and cruel form of terror. By some miracle she survived the great famine in Ukraine, one of the major examples of this terror. In 1936, when she was twelve years old, she and her family joined thousands of Poles in being shipped from pre-partition Polish lands to Kazakhstan; here too, with the severe climate, famine and disease, survival verged on miraculous. In 1941 she began her studies in Alma Ata. Moving gradually further west, through various medical academies, first in Kharkov, then in Chernovitz, she finally ended up in Poland, though not without difficulty in acquiring repatriate status. She graduated in medicine from Wrocław University. Since 1955 she has lived in Siemiatyczy, in the Podlasie region (where she and her husband had intended to stay only a few years). She devoted her entire professional life to working in the hospital there, as an administrator of the children’s ward. To this day she is known throughout the area as a pediatrician, and is visited by patients from all over the region and beyond. 151 NO N - F I C T I O N Franceska Michalska All the Joy of Living. In Volhynia, in Kazakhstan, in Poland Cała radość życia. Na Wołyniu, w Kazachstanie, w Polsce Keynote A child’s incredible odyssey through one of the 20th century’s darkest times. Sales points •A side of World War Two and a chapter in history virtually unknown in the West •A book that underlines joy and optimism in life in spite of the harshest adversity Description Date of publication: 2007 Pages: 176 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World There are some books that charm you by being so familiar, while others expand your sense of the world that you live in, and the history that composes it. All the Joy of Living. In Volhynia, in Kazakhstan, in Poland, the gripping and extraordinary autobiography of Franceska Michalska, chronicling her years spent as a child during the Second World War and the time of the great famine in Ukraine, is this second kind of book precisely. With her wealth of startling experiences, and her talent for descriptions so vivid and sensory they approach the surreal, Michalska pulls the reader into times and landscapes most would find utterly foreign. “They began cleaning the well. The water sprang forth dirty and red, but people started drinking it anyway.” “What did we eat? Grandpa went to the forest and tore down linden leaves […]. He dried them on boards or sheets, then crushed them into flour and made something like pancakes out of them.” With a remarkable eye for detail, Michalska’s narrative combines childlike wonder with one of the most horrific chapters in European history, and along the way performs the miraculous – she makes this exotic and remote piece of time something the reader experiences as immediate and richly compelling. Bypassing the major historical events and concentrating on personal experiences, this book makes the reader an authentic witness to history, like it or not. The reader comes to history from the most important sort of perspective, the point of view of the individual. He/she has the chance to visualize some of the most extreme conditions people have ever had to survive. Wojciech Jaskuła You devour these incredible memoirs all in one gulp. Many of the anecdotes here are presented with humor. There are many copies of documents, a few photographs. And only the memories of people who remained in the fearsome steppe, with only themselves to rely on, keeps us from feeling a truly carefree joy of living. Tadeusz Nyczek, “Przekrój” 152 NO N - F I C T I O N Tadeusz Pankiewicz Tadeusz Pankiewicz (1908–1993) — a pharmacist, graduate of the Jagiellonian University, and owner of the Pod Orłem [Under the Eagle] Pharmacy in Krakow, which functioned in the Krakow Ghetto, with the permission of the German authorities, from 1941–1943. For helping and rescuing Jews, he was given a Righteous among the Nations Medal. 153 NO N - F I C T I O N Tadeusz Pankiewicz The Pharmacy in the Krakow Ghetto Apteka w getcie krakowskim Keynote Tadeusz Pankiewicz’s memoir is one of the most important testimonies to the saving of the Krakow Jews. Sales points •One of the most important testimonies on the history of the Krakow Jews •Moving recollections of the ghetto inhabitant, later awarded the Righteous among the Nations Medal. Description Date of publication: 2007 Pages: 280 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World Complete English translation available “From the moment the ‘Jewish district’ was created, I unexpectedly became its inhabitant, as the owner of the Pod Orłem Pharmacy at Zgody Square 18.” Tadeusz Pankiewicz An extraordinarily precise and shattering tale of a tragedy that occurred not only in Krakow, but in many other cities in Poland. The story of events that should never be forgotten. Tadeusz Pankiewicz lived and worked for two-and-a-half years in the ghetto, and lived through all the stages of its existence: from the closing of the gates and the first harassments, through the deportations, conducted with increasing cruelty, until the total liquidation. During this time, the Pod Orłem Pharmacy served as an asylum and point of contact between two worlds: the Jewish population shut off behind the walls and the “free” people living outside of them. Its staff became a link between these two worlds. This was a place where you could read the latest news from the front, find underground press, or get shelter during nighttime arrests. Letters and packages were left here for people living on the Aryan side, and news and deliveries were also made the other way. The few ghetto inhabitants who managed to survive the cruel time of the war still retain grateful memories of the Pod Orłem Pharmacy and its proprietor. Target market Readers of memoirs, non-fiction, those interested in history, and the Holocaust in particular. 154 NO N - F I C T I O N Jadwiga Staniszkis, Artur Cieślar Jadwiga Staniszkis — a famous and celebrated sociologist, a professor at Warsaw University and the National-Louis University in Nowy Sącz, and a journalist. Artur Cieślar — a writer, reporter, translator, poet, and traveler wrapped into one. 155 NO N - F I C T I O N Jadwiga Staniszkis, Artur Cieślar East and West. An Encounter Wschód i Zachód. Spotkania Keynote Getting inside the Middle Kingdom: a remarkable encounter between two people and two worlds: a professor and a writer/traveler, East and West Sales points •A highly regarded professor and a Buddhist writer hold a fascinating conversation about the similarities and differences between the worlds of the West and the East Description Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 280 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World A famous professor speaks with a writer, poet, and traveler. An exchange between two people fascinated with the East for different reasons. Jadwiga Staniszkis is interested in comparing the thought of the Orient with that of the West – she is fascinated by the philosophy, the literature, the concept of the person, society, and power. She considers the differences and tries to understand them. In the first part of the book, the authors discuss her path to encountering the East. In the second part, Artur Cieślar speaks of his adventures in the East. He does not focus on understanding it intellectually. He is more interested in what will give him spiritual development, and allow him to function better in the contemporary world. Target market A wide range of readers: those interested in the culture of the East, philosophy, sociology, history, politics, and spirituality. 156 NO N - F I C T I O N Tomasz Stańko, Rafał Księżyk Tomasz Stańko (b. 1942) — is a world renowned trumpet player, considered to be one of the best jazz trumpet players in the world. His concerts have always drawn a huge audience, with the concert halls all over the worl being filled up. Rafał Księżyk (b. 1970) — is a journalist and a music critic. He has participated in creating the contemporary Polish music and pop culture press since the 1990s. He has worked as an editor in such magazines as “Brum”, “Plastik”, “Antena Krzynu”, and his articles on mucic appeared in all major specialist newspapers as well as “Gazeta Wyborcza”, “Newsweek” and “Przekrój”. He is currently a subeditor in “Playboy”, and he writesmusic reviews for “Machina” and cultural programme TVP Kultura. 157 NO N - F I C T I O N Tomasz Stańko, Rafał Księżyk Desperado Desperado Keynote A feast of private interviews with legendary Polish jazz trumpeter Tomasz Stańko. Sales points •The most in-depth series of interviews with Tomasz Stańko available to date. •The story of a vivid life through turbulent times. •Supplemented with plenty of photographs, a timeline, and Stańko’s discography. Description Date of publication: 2010 Pages: 544 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World Rights optioned: Germany English sample available German sample available “I chose the life of a desperado. On the edge. On the brink of death.” This quote from one of the many generous interviews with Tomasz Stańko included in this volume both explains the title and gives you some idea of what to expect. The book traces the musician’s 50-year jazz odyssey from his first steps in the 1960s to the present, beginning with his days in the famous Krzysztof Komeda ensemble, making soundtracks to Roman Polanski films and living as a student in Krakow, and concluding with the established international celebrity we now know, recording for the cult ECM label and touring the world with his trumpet. Stańko seems to have met everyone making jazz on the scene in Poland over the years – which were much less than favorable times for jazz musicians – but he also has a great deal to say about musicians active in the West throughout the same period – Miles Davis, Ornette Coleman, John Coletrane, and many others. Like many of his Western counterparts, Stańko also struggled with drug addiction for decades, and in “Desperado” he speaks frankly of his use of heroin, hashish, copious alcohol and many other substances, and of his ultimate triumph over his addictions. The rest of the book’s five hundred pages cover a wide variety of topics, from Stańko’s loves and travels, his long path to success, his family, and communist Poland, but above all the conversations deal with music – reflections on his own work as a composer and musician, and fresh takes on jazz music from Duke Ellington and Chet Baker to Cecil Taylor and Sun Ra. In sum, this is compulsory reading for anyone interested in the history of jazz, from a perspective seldom encountered in the West, and a fascinating account of what it meant to be a brilliant jazz musician in a communist country. Stańko talks like he plays. His phrases come out a bit messy, but they’re honest and compelling. These are fascinating confessions by one of Poland’s greatest artists. Donata Subbotko, Gazeta Wyborcza 158 NO N - F I C T I O N This is also a book of very private confessions. Stańko’s taut responses contain more truth than other people’s long-winded statements. Jacek Marczyński, Gazeta Rzeczpospolita The image of Stańko that emerges from these interviews might surprise you. Everyone knows that he’s a great trumpeter. What’s interesting are the circumstances surrounding how he came onto the gray, communist Polish jazz scene “like a tornado,” his life with groupies, and his balance on the edge of life, as fragile as a line of cocaine. Magazyn Literacki Target market Jazz lovers, those interested in intimate interviews with famous celebrities. 159 NO N - F I C T I O N Jerzy Stuhr Jerzy Stuhr (b. 1947) – one of the most popular and most versatile Polish actors, a film and theater director affiliated with Krakow’s Stary Theater from 1972–1991, a lecturer at Krakow’s Theater School and rector of the same learning institution, the winner of many prestigious awards, member of the European Film Academy that awards the Felix. Aleksandra Pawlicka – a journalist working in the national news team of the Przekrój weekly, Polish Studies graduate from Warsaw University, and Brussels correspondent for the Polish Section of BBC Radio from 1999–2002. 160 NO N - F I C T I O N Jerzy Stuhr The Stuhrs. A Family History Stuhrowie. Historie rodzinne Keynote Great loves, remarkable characters, difficult decisions, successes and failures, joys and sorrows – the value and power of a family slowly unfolds Sales points The tale of the family of one of Poland’s most famous actors Won accolades from readers and critics both Description Date of publication: 2008 Pages: 280 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World The Stuhrs – A Family Portrait with a Historical Backdrop In the latter half of the 19th century Jerzy Stuhr’s great-grandfather, Leopold, came to Krakow, where he bought a building on Podgórze Square and set up a restaurant. From then on Polish, Austrian, Czech, and Hungarian sub-plots weave in with the fascinating story of Krakow’s Stuhr family. In Jerzy Stuhr’s tale, family history interweaves with the history of Krakow, Poland, and Europe. The household archive holds photographs, portraits, a service medal, a cutlass, a glass, and a show cabinet – the true and reconstructed family history is woven around these objects. There are also the compelling notes from Auschwitz by one family member, Oskar Stuhr, a lawyer who took part in the Second World War, who was arrested and imprisoned in the Montelupa Prison, in Wiśnicz, and in Auschwitz. Another attraction of the book is the wide selection of photographs from the family archive and the family tree prepared by Marianna Stuhr. “A great-grandfather who dearly believed that his dreams would only come true in Krakow. A grandfather whose favorite entertainment was to pretend it was his own funeral. An aunt who said that a woman was only worth as much as the man’s pants she hung up to dry. Mrożek mixed with Gombrowicz, says Jerzy Stuhr. It’s a good thing he decided to write this Family History. And not just because he owes it to his children, as he says.” Target market Iza Bartosz, Viva! Readers of popular biographies of famous people, diaries, historical novels, non-fiction, and memoirs; those interested in film, theater, and acting 161 NO N - F I C T I O N Jerzy Stuhr That’s What I Think… Tak sobie myślę… Keynote The portrait of a master – a beautiful and heartwarming tale of one year in the life of a man and a year of fighting for life. Sales points •One of the most anticipated books of the season •A book that swiftly became a bestseller Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 272 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World When in fall 2011 information was released on Jerzy Stuhr’s serious illness, all of Poland held their breath. This beloved actor began fighting for his life... and began to write. In the notebooks his daughter gave him almost every day, in the hospital and at home, in every free moment he wrote down his thoughts, reflections, and observations. Thus emerged a remarkable diary, which is not only the record of a struggle, but also a testimony of a love of life. However it might show itself. In That’s What I Think… Jerzy Stuhr comments on current events in Poland and in Europe, sometimes bitterly, and sometimes very seriously follows sports events. But he devotes the most space to culture. He writes about his career and his mission as an actor, wondering what it means to be an actor in the contemporary world. At times he even turns into a film critic and offers deep analyses of films. And his illness? Of course it is there, but in the background. Jerzy Stuhr is most fascinated by what is outside the hospital window. The closer we get to the book’s end, the longer the gaps between notes. This marks the actor’s return to his professional life, and thus brings us to the end of this remarkable conversation between Jerzy Stuhr and himself – and with the reader at the same time. “For the reader this book is an intimate meeting with a great artist, an experienced actor, and above all, with a wise, witty, and warm human being.” “One of the most highly anticipated books of the season.” Target market Anna Sobańda, Dziennik Aleksandra Pawlicka, Newsweek Readers of memoirs and conversations, lovers of film and theater, readers of biographies and opinion weeklies. 162 NO N - F I C T I O N Dorota Sumińska Wydawnictwo Literackie represents translation rights to the following titles by Dorota Sumińska: 163 NO N - F I C T I O N Dorota Sumińska Dorota Sumińska – a practicing veterinarian for many years, and a pet psychologist by passion, who has hosted popular radio and television programs about animals for several years. She has written books about animals and guides for pet owners, including the best‑selling Autobiography on Four Paws, An Animal in the Bed and the novel The World according to a Dog; she is also the co‑author of a guide entitled How to Raise a Child, a Dog, a Cat, and a Boyfriend. 164 NO N - F I C T I O N Dorota Sumińska Animal in the Bedroom Zwierz w łóżku Keynote Science written in a language and with a warmth that everyone can enjoy Sales points •Fun and accessible, yet thought-provoking •A unique combination of popular psychology and zoology Description Date of publication: 2010 Pages: 282 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World Some ten years ago, a film called Microcosmos paired opera music with a pair of romantically entwined snails and proved that, incredibly enough, these lowly creatures could be seen as passionate. In Animal in the Bedroom, veterinarian and animal psychologist Dorota Suminska goes a step further – she rifles through a whole catalogue of human emotions and behaviors and demonstrates how they are reflected or even partially explained by close observations of the animal world. Whether comparing a mother’s first kisses to her child with dogs’ regurgitation of food into the mouths of their young, or the mother African buffalo’s overpowering love for her son with the drunken exploits of a friend and his all-forgiving mother, Suminska’s tales maintain a warmth and humor that will keep readers engaged and amused through its many and varied chapters. Ultimately, the real value of Suminska’s book goes much deeper, however – it teaches us to see ourselves and our foibles in a whole new light, and it imparts a sense of wonder and a whole new affection for the natural world surrounding us. A page-turner – as this author’s books always are. And a real eye-opener! “Wrozka” Christmas guide In this book we come across parrots, horses, octopi, leopards… […] The masses of interesting details and Suminska’s light touch are the aces up the sleeve of this very enjoyable book. “Dziennik Polski” 165 NO N - F I C T I O N Dorota Sumińska Still on Four Paws Dalej na czterech łapach Keynote A tale chock full of anecdotes, hairpin turns and astonishing events, in which animals and people play equally important roles Sales points • A continuation of the unforgettable Autobiography on Four Paws •Each new book by this author wins the hearts of faithful readers, and new ones as well Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 292 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World A wise, moving, and bracing tale of the fortunes of beloved animals, families, and friends known by this veterinary doctor. Dorota Sumińska writes of the home she now has, and her loved ones – of what makes the household go round, who has made the latest appearances, and what defines it. Thus she speaks of the joyful pastime of acquiring new family members – among others, there appear a new husband, grandchildren, another Pekingese etc. We also gradually learn of departures: of the author’s mother, the death of her father, the husband of a close friend, as well as of pets, including Slipper, who had theretofore created a hierarchy of relationships between the pets. The book weaves final farewells with the power of love, hope, and faith. There are also journeys: mainly to the author’s beloved Asia. During her faraway excursions, the author has a look at some exotic nature, and makes contact with her favorite animals. This personal story includes many anecdotes, which create a colorful and charming world that holds the reader’s fascination till the final page. This book is abundantly illustrated with photographs from the author’s archive. Target market Animal lovers of every age, readers of memoirs, autobiographies, travel enthusiasts 166 NO N - F I C T I O N Tymon Tymański Tymon Tymański (b. 1968) is a composer, multi-instrumentalist, author of lyrics, vocalist, columnist, prose-writer, actor, and producer. He is famous for his provocative artistic ideas and controversial statements. He had his first bands back in elementary school. Miłość, a band he led, is considered to have revamped Polish jazz. From 1994–1998 Miłość was chosen the best Polish acoustic jazz band of the year; in 2001 it was declared the most interesting jazz group of the decade. Tymon Tymański has been the founder and leader or co-leader of such bands as Kury, Czan, NRD, Tymon i Trupy, Masło, Poganie, The Users, Tymański Yass Ensemble, Tymon & The Transistors, Polish Brass Ensemble, and Jazz Out. He has composed music to the following films: Stroke, Metamorphoses, The Wedding (for which he received the Polskie Orły film award in 2005), and for many plays in the theater. He has appeared as an actor in the films Segment ‘76, The Wedding, and Satan Spa, and in plays (including Musicians of the Great Field and Enter the Dragon – Trailer). He has won many awards and distinctions, including the Polityka Passport 2000, the Fryderyka 1998, and Machinera 1998. 167 NO N - F I C T I O N Rafał Księżyk Rafał Księżyk (b. 1970) is a journalist and music critic, and the author and interviewer of the Tomasz Stańko autobiography that was so well received by readers and critics. Since the early 1990s he has co-created the face of the music press and pop culture, since its very infancy. He serves as vice-editor-in-chief of Playboy, and as a music critic he works with Machina magazine and TVP Kultura. He has co-written enormously successful biographical books about Tomasz Stańko, Desperado: An Autobiography, and about Robert Brylewski, A Crisis in Babylon. 168 NO N - F I C T I O N Tymon Tymański, Rafał Księżyk A Biography of Tymon Tymański Biografia Tymona Tymańskiego Keynote A master of musical improvisation and a legendary music critic in fascinating conversation. Sales points •Tymański is considered to have reinvented Polish jazz. •One of Poland’s most famous and controversial artists. •The winner of many prestigious awards and distinctions. Description Date of publication: forthcoming Pages: to come Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoir Rights available: World An autobiography of one of the most distinctive and rapacious contemporary Polish musicians and composers, leader of the cult groups Miłość, Kury, and Trupy – in conversation with Rafał Księżyk. There was always a lot of music in Tymon Tymański’s home. His brother had a tape deck and was always recording things off the radio, or taping music from his friends. They listened to The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, Yes, and Genesis. Music was his constant companion. Ever since his childhood he was a great fan of the Beatles. It was back then that he first had the idea of being a musician. When he was ten years old, he was certain. His plans came true in every way. One of his bands, Miłość, was chosen best group of the year four times running, and was named best Polish jazz band of the 1990s. For some years now, Tymański has been simultaneously heading alt-rock and jazz groups, playing bass or electric guitar. He loves various kinds of happenings, and unconventional art and cultural projects. He has worked with Lester Bowie, John Zorn, Dave Douglas, Chris Speed, Jim Black, Lech Janerka, Robert Brylewski, Antoni Gralak, Aleksander Korecki, Włodzimierz Kiniorski, Mikołaj Trzaska, Leszek Możdżer, and Jacek Olter. The backdrop of this autobiographical story is a picture of Polish culture of the 1990s, a portrait of today’s show business in Poland, the Polish music scene, and the dynamic Gdańsk-area arts scene. The book contains a wealth of photographs from Tymon Tymański’s family archive. Target market Readers of autobiographies, book-length interviews, and memoirs, admirers of Tymon Tymański’s work, those interested in history and music. 169 NO N - F I C T I O N Danuta Wałęsa Ed. Piotr Adamowicz Danuta Wałęsa (b. 1949) — from 1990 to 1995 the First Lady of Poland, social activist. On 8 september 1969 she became the wife of Lech Wałęsa, future leader of Solidarity, president of Poland from 1990 to 1995. On behalf of her husband she accepted the Nobel Peace Prize on 10 December 1983. She is the honorary president of the Gdańsk Fund for the Development of Culture (Fundacja na Rzecz Rozwoju Kultury). Member of the Honorary Council of the Darboven Idee Grant contest for enterprising women and member of the Honorary Council of the International Centre for Missing and Exploited Children. Piotr Adamowicz — a journalist, he was an active member of the Soldarity movement in the 1980s. He worked for Agence France Prese in 1988–1992 and was a correspondent for Reuters in 1991–1994. Since 1993 he writes for Rzeczpospolita daily. He is a social advisor for the Foundation for Solidarity Centre and European Solidarity Centre.He represents the following politicians in the Institute for National Remembrance: Bogdan Borusewicz, Aleksander Hall, Bożena i Maciej Grzywaczewscy, Bogdan Lis, Donald Tusk, Lech Wałęsa. He is a co-author of an entry in Opposition in the Polish Peaople’s Republic. A Dictionary of Biographies 1956–1989. 170 NO N - F I C T I O N Danuta Wałęsa Dreams and Secrets Marzenia i tajemnice Ed. Piotr Adamowicz THE BESTSELLING POLISH BOOK OF 2011 – 375 000 COPIES SOLD Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 552 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World Rights sold: The Czech Republic (Euromedia), France (Buchet Chastel), Portugal (Aletheia), The Ukraine (Folio) English sample available A biographical tale by Danuta Wałęsowa, her memoirs recounting the story of her life and the lives of the Wałęsa family. A self-portrait of a woman – mother and wife – accompanying Lech Wałęsa first when he was a trade unionist, then an oppositionist, and finally the president, always supporting him unconditionally. She was a silent participant and a witness of the most important, groundbreaking political events in the history of the second half of the 20th century. She looked at them through the filter of her family, for which she was responsible, especially when her husband could not stand by her. She had to bear the distress of her husband the oppositionist being persecuted, she had to endure the controversies around the trade unionist and politician, and last but not least learn her new role of the First Lady. Honest and authentic in its directness, it is a tale of life, growing up in the countryside, studying and starting the first job. It is a story of major groundbreaking moments and important people: the husband, the children, friends, confidants, befriended men of the cloth and other people tied to the Wałęsa family by friendship and union or political functions. Dreams and secrets is a truly honest, very intimate and bold private tale about living in the shadow of one’s husband and of great politics. It is a sometimes painful and tense confession about the price Danuta Wałęsa and her family had to pay for being in the centre of political events, of living with Lech Wałęsa. The story is illustrated with private photographs from the Wałęsas’ archives. 171 NO N - F I C T I O N Ludwika Włodek Ludwika Włodek is a great-granddaughter of Jarosław and Anna Iwaszkiewicz. She is an assistant professor at the University of Warsaw, a journalist for Gazeta Wyborcza daily, she writes for Wysokie Obcasy women’s magazine and Duży Format (reportages about Eastern affairs, Iran, Jewish culture and women’s issues). 172 NO N - F I C T I O N Ludwika Włodek A Tale of the Iwaszkiewicz Family Pra. Opowieść o rodzinie Iwaszkiewiczów Keynote Memoirs of a turbulent period in Polish history, and one of its most memorable literary figures, Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz – written by his great‑granddaughter. Sales points •Włodek is perhaps of the last generation that can write of Iwaszkiewicz’s life and the era emotionally, and not historically •A book which opens a whole, colorful world, and one to which the Western reader seldom has access Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 384 Category: Biography – Autobiography – Memoirs Rights available: World Description For Ludwika Włodek, writing is a grand adventure, and even readers utterly unfamiliar with Poland directly before and after the Second World War, or those with little exposure to the great Polish writer Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz (whose stories have provided the basis for many of Andrzej Wajda’s films), cannot fail to fall into Włodek’s infectious way of creating an atmosphere, of spinning a tale. She culls from a wide range of sources – letters, diaries, notes, anecdotes – but the most precious source here is Włodek’s own memory, from which she draws liberally. The result is thus somewhere between a report from a bygone era and a personal record of a life with a remarkable family. Target market Readers of memoirs and personal histories. 173 NO N - F I C T I O N Zygmunt Bauman Zygmunt Bauman (b. 1925) is a world famous sociologist, philosopher, essayist, and one of the greatest authorities in social criticism. He has created sociological concepts to explain the riddles of globalization, overpopulation, migration, and exclusion, he describes the fascination for electronic media, the mechanisms of advertising, ties between people, the reasons for individual choices, and the meanderings of the economy and politics. Since 1968, when he was removed from Warsaw University and left Poland, he has lived and lectured abroad. He served for many years as a professor at the University of Leeds, and is presently retired. His books include: Modernity and the Holocaust; Liquid Life; Liquid Fear; Community; The Art of Life; Europe: An Unfinished Adventure; and Society under Siege. 174 NO N - F I C T I O N Stanisław Obirek Stanisław Obirek (b. 1956) is a theologian, historian, teacher, and cultural anthropologist, and an ex-Jesuit. His interests are focused on the place of religion in contemporary culture, inter-religious dialogue, the consequences of the Holocaust, and ways of overcoming religious, societal, and cultural conflicts. He is a theology PhD at the Pontifical University of John Paul II in Cracow, has a humanities post-doctorate in modern history, and in 2011 was nominated professor. From 1994–1998 he was rector at the Jesuits’ College in Krakow, in 1999 he lectured in the history of Central and Eastern Europe at the Jesuit Holy Cross College in Worcester. He is currently lecturing at the Warsaw University. 175 NO N - F I C T I O N Zygmunt Bauman, Stanisław Obirek Of God and Man: Conversations O Bogu i człowieku: rozmowy Keynote A remarkably good-natured book, full of passion for the undying search for answers to the fundamental questions in man’s life Sales points •A world famous sociologist and a philosopher speak of matters of prime importance •A conversation with the author of many important and fervently discussed books in the 20th century Description Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 204 Category: Religion Rights available: World Rights sold: Italy (Laterza), UK (Polity) – pending A book that fortifies the spirit and brings profound intellectual satisfaction, by a world-famous sociologist and a theologian. The interlocutors, their intellectual biographies notwithstanding, share the same quest: they are looking for answers to the place of God in man’s life. Despite expectations, their roads often converge. They share a fine understanding, and gently contribute their own personal experiences. What do they speak about? About the one God and many gods, about tolerance, about the search for the sole truth, about how to define the religious experience, the relationship between God and man, the role of chance in life, and about their idols, and finally – about hope. They cite many philosophers, theologians, and writers, including Pascal, Lévinas, Jaspers, Gadamer, Sartre, Arendt, Lem, Goethe, and Kertesz. Stanisław Obirek confesses that many of his intuitions have been confirmed by Bauman’s work, though expressed more concisely than he was able to. Zygmunt Bauman astonishes with his knowledge of theological issues, and it is he who formulates the compelling notion of the immortality of hope. Target market Readers of Bauman, students, journalists, political scientists; readers interested in a contemporary understanding of religion and the dialogue between religions 176 NO N - F I C T I O N Father Jacek Stryczek Father Jacek Stryczek is an unconventional kind of priest, a performer who has been called the head marketer of the Church; he is the creator and Chairman of the SPRING Association, organizer of operation Noble Package, who received the Jan Wejchert PRB Award in 2012 for his social and charity work, and was named Newsweek’s Social Worker of the Year for 2012. In 2007 he was named the Shepherd of Businessmen. He is known for his unconventional sermons (sometimes using multimedia techniques) and for his moving happenings, such as „See Yourself in a Different Light” in front of the Stock Exchange in 2009, or placing a confessional booth before a shopping mall. 177 NO N - F I C T I O N Father Jacek Stryczek The FaceGod Project FaceBóg Keynote An inspiring, modern tale of Christianity and the faces of God in the modern world. Sales points •One of Poland’s most famous and well-known priests •The head marketing man for the Church, famed for his unconventional methods •Named Newsweek’s Social Worker of the Year for 2012 •Named the Shepherd of Businessmen Description Date of publication: forthcoming Pages: to come Category: Religion Rights available: World The Modern Basics of Christianity for Everyone The intriguing tale of the sources of Christianity and the faces of God in the modern world, of ways of finding Him and reaching Him. And also the value of meeting another person, opening up to others and the joy that comes from helping others. A charismatic priest, Father Jacek Stryczek, poses the fundamental questions and formulates the answers: What is Christianity? What is it really all about, particularly at this juncture, in the post-modern world and society? WHO AM I? I – raised in the here and now, in a Christian, Catholic tradition? What does it mean to be a Christian? And what do I know about it? The author elaborates on the subject of faith and religion, with references that go beyond the Bible. He provides examples from everyday life, his personal stories and experiences inspiring him the most: his conversion, gradual discovery of faith, of God, of Scripture, maturing to decide to become a priest, taking decisions to do social activities and initiatives like the Academy of the Future and the Noble Package. Target market Readers of books about religion, those in search, in doubt, or believers – from their teens to one hundred years old 178 NO N - F I C T I O N Andrzej Wiśniewski Andrzej Wiśniewski – a psychologist and psychotherapist. For twenty-five years, he has been engaged as a family and marriage therapist, and also conducts individual therapy. He lectures at the College of Social Psychology and is psychology supervisor at the Polish Psychological Association and Polish Psychiatric Association. He works in the Psychoeducation Laboratory team. Co-author of the book Loving Relationships and Separations. 179 NO N - F I C T I O N Katarzyna Grochola, Andrzej Wiśniewski Marital and Extra-Marital Fun and Games Gry i zabawy małżeńskie i pozamałżeńskie Keynote A self-help guide which throws new light on every relationship and proves that not much is needed for the word “forever” to become reality. Sales points •The most popular drama novel writer in Poland, whose books sell by the millions. •Each of her books is a major best-seller. Description Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 336 Category: Self-Help Rights available: World Serious questions and honest answers, humour and surprising comparisons, but above all an unswerving search for the truth – one of the most popular Polish female authors talks with famous therapist Andrzej Wiśniewski about games and fun in relationships, those which are innocent and those which are risky. “The reader merely needs to have the courage of her convictions when taking a decision, and no prescriptions or ready solutions should be needed, all the more so, as there are none. The authors have therefore supplied the pleasure that flows from animated conversation, while having a clean conscience in the knowledge that they are fulfilling the expectations of those who turn to Marital and Extra-Marital Fun and Games”. Andrzej Wiśniewski Target market Champions of Katarzyna Grochola’s output, readers of self-help guides, those interested in psychology, sociology and psychotherapy. 180 NO N - F I C T I O N Katarzyna Grochola, Andrzej Wiśniewski Loving Relationships and Break Ups Związki i rozwiązki miłosne Keynote A self-help guide which is provoking a storm and lending hope to the idea of a happy, error-free tomorrow. Sales points •The most popular drama novel writer in Poland, whose books sell by the millions. •Each of her books is a major best-seller. Description Date of publication: 2010 Pages: 306 Category: Self-Help Rights available: World Far from obvious questions and surprising answers, sparkling wit and moments of reverie, true stories and original reflections – one of the most popular female authors talks with Andrzej Wiśniewski, a family therapist, about loving relationships, those that are good and those that are bad. “The reader merely needs to have the courage of her convictions when taking a decision, and no prescriptions or ready solutions should be needed, all the more so, as there are none. The authors have therefore supplied the pleasure that flows from animated conversation, while having a clean conscience in the knowledge that they are fulfilling the expectations of those who turn to this book”. Andrzej Wiśniewski “This book is a unique opportunity to eavesdrop on a conversation about marriage and loneliness, love and hate, fidelity and unfaithfulness – about what binds people and what divides them. There’s one single thing in the world for which it’s worth doing anything. That’s love of course”. Katarzyna Grochola Target market Champions of Katarzyna Grochola’s output, readers of self-help guides, those interested in psychology, sociology and psychotherapy. 181 NO N - F I C T I O N Edward Kajdański Edward Kajdański (b. 1925) – a writer, journalist, and diplomat. Born in Manchukuo, where he attended a Polish gymnasium (middle school) and began pharmacy studies at the North Manchurian University. In 1951 he left for Poland during the repatriation. He worked at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, as a trade advisor in Beijing, and also served as consulate in the Canton Province. 182 NO N - F I C T I O N Edward Kajdański Chinese Medicine for Beginners Medycyna chińska dla każdego Keynote The world of Chinese medicine from the perspective of a many-year resident of China – a remarkable combination of knowledge, passion and talent Sales points •A multi-angled guide through Chinese medicine for the beginner •A guidebook written by a specialist, born and raised in China Description Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 320 Category: Self-Help Rights available: World A popular guide to Traditional Chinese Medicine for everyone who would like to find out how to restore harmony to the body and mind, how to improve vital energy, and how to live a long and healthy life. The “specialist from China” guides the reader through the best-kept secrets of the world of Chinese philosophy, culture, medicine, and customs, as a person who once lived among the Chinese long enough to understand, learn, and communicate their mindset and tradition. The reader will encounter the mysterious-sounding yin/yang theory, the transformation of the five elements and chi (lifeforce), and will also find out how precise diagnoses can be made through testing the pulse and the color of the tongue. Later comes the mighty acupuncture, a method used for years during anaesthetic operations. There are also descriptions of the most important herbs and minerals used by Chinese doctors. The reader will also find out how doctors used a very complex procedure to perform check-ups on Chinese lady aristocrats, and how the medical Canon of the Golden Emperor arrived in Gdańsk and Krakow back during the Renaissance. The book also reveals from whom Avicenna would have copied his medical textbook, and whether Copernicus could have known about the Chinese vaccines against measles. E. Kajdański makes splendid use of his vast knowledge and passion, combining stories about himself and his ties with China with explanations of Chinese philosophies and customs. The volume is richly illustrated with materials from old Chinese medical textbooks. Accompanying the main text, there is a list of the books and medicines mentioned in the text, and their brief descriptions. Target market A book for everyone, especially those curious about alternative medicines and the culture of the East; for those suffering from an illness, and in search of an alternate cure. Readers of guidebooks. 183 NO N - F I C T I O N Mikołaj Spodaryk, Elżbieta Grabowska Mikołaj Spodaryk – a pediatrician, creator and administrator of the University Children’s Hospital in Krakow-Prokocim, and Vice‑dean of the Health and Medical Sciences Department of the Andrzej Frycz Modrzewski Krakow Academy. He is an organizer of camps for children and an activist. In 2010 he oversaw a project to make flower gardens around Krakow’s hospitals, where young patients could spend their free time in an active way. He is the founder of Poland’s first division of Municipal Bike Emergency Unit. In 2008 he was honored with the title of Good Samaritan in the health services category. Elżbieta Gabrowska – a clinical dietician at the Nutritional Care Ward of the University Children’s Hospital in Krakow-Prokocim. She runs classes with students at the Jagiellonian University’s Collegium Medicum – at the Pediatrics, Gastroenterology and Nutrition Clinic. 184 NO N - F I C T I O N Mikołaj Spodaryk, Elżbieta Grabowska I Know What My Child Is Eating Wiem, co je moje dziecko Keynote A book that is indispensable to all adults, about how the right nutrition is the best life investment. Sales points •Written by top specialists •Very well received by readers and critics Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 308 Category: Self-Help Rights available: World A guidebook for parents, nannies, grandparents, and doctors! The first book to be so reliable, accessible, and practical. Professor Mikołaj Spodaryk and dietician Elżbieta Gabrowska share their knowledge and experience, while effectively, thoughtfully, and often humorously dealing with today’s myths and doubts. Do you wonder: – whether you should let your child eat chips? – if pizza is a good idea for lunch? – what you should be absolutely careful to do as a parent? Then pick up I Know What My Child Is Eating. There are a number of example breakfasts and lunches and practical recipes written by an experienced dietician to help even the most clueless parents feed their children wisely. She explains to how to feed your children from the first days onward, so that they are healthy, avoid illness, and grow resistant to various kinds of illnesses and ailments; what to buy and where; and what rules a parent should always follow. “This is the first guidebook to contain such reliable information on feeding children from the first months to eighteen years of age. A number of example breakfasts and lunches and practical recipes written by an experienced dietician can help even the most clueless parents feed their children wisely.” XXI wiek “Every page of this guide gives us answers to questions that eventually crop up in every family.” Gazeta Wyborcza Target market All those interested in healthy eating and diet. Parents, grandparents, caretakers, dieticians, and doctors 185 NO N - F I C T I O N Irena A. Stanisławska, Dorota Krzywicka, Dorota Sumińska How to Live in Harmony with the Bigger and Smaller Members of the Household Jak wychować dziecko, psa, kota… i faceta Keynote A unique and lively approach to some very challenging issues. Sales points •All three “authors” have a great deal of experience behind them, and they make an electric combination. Date of publication: 2011 Pages: 326 Category: Self-Help Rights available: World •A very new slant on a familiar – and ever-popular – subject: how to be happy with the ones you love. Description The interviewers are Irena Stanisławska, onetime journalist on extreme sports for “Playboy” magazine, and more recently a writer of books on psychology, and Dorota Krzywicka, a psychologist who has earned some popularity on a Polish talk show and through her newspaper columns. Their subject is Dorota Sumińśka – a veterinarian, writer, and author of radio and television programmes about animals. In this book-length interview the women explore family relationships, contact with pets, and the analogies between them. Dynamic, funny, and sometimes arrestingly intimate, this book succeeds with its sheer charm, and with its unexpected flashes of wisdom and insight. The language is not afraid to be intelligent, but this never gets in the way of the fun and delight of reading, and taking part in the interplay between these three women. “Chick lit” for the whole family. Target market Those look for intelligent and modern advice on family matters, without judgement or moralising. 186 NO N - F I C T I O N Ewa Woydyłło How to Live with Depression, but Not in Depression Bo jesteś człowiekiem. Żyć z depresją, ale nie w depresji Keynote This book takes an illness that strikes growing numbers of people and strives to make it comprehensible and less frightening, without trivializing its gravity. Sales points • An author of around ten popular psychology titles, and a major voice in spreading Alcoholics Anonymous around Poland. • A book that is helpful, wise, and perhaps most importantly, healing. Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 284 Category: Self-Help Rights available: World Description For her latest installment in a series of books that invite the reader into the therapist’s office, Woydyłło tackles depression. She begins with simple observations, allowing for the sickness to be diagnosed and differentiating it from temporary mood swings, which are often mistaken for depression. Additionally, the author urges visiting a psychologist or a doctor. With deep sympathy for the gravity of depression, she helps the reader on the road leading out of the sickness. Free of specialist jargon, this book speaks to the reader in simple, clear language, explaining non-medical ways of treating the illness, and concluding with numerous varieties of professional help. She also makes use of concrete examples taken from literature or real life. The psychological tests featured in the book help readers figure out if they is prone to depression, how they deal with problems, what kind of relationships they have with other people, and if their life is likely to make them depressed or not. After reading, we have come to a firmer understanding of this sickness, and we believe that getting better is possible – and this is the book’s most important and valuable message. Target market Readers of self-help books and psychology “work-books”, readers of women’s magazines. 187 NO N - F I C T I O N Michał Głombiowski Michał Głombiowski (b. 1975) is a journalist, editor, traveler, and photographer. His articles have been published in Rzeczpospolita, Gazeta Wyborcza, Polityka, Przekrój, Newsweek, Podróży, and Traveler. He has written a book that records his several-month journey through Spain, entitled The Third Day. He lives in Gdańsk. 188 NO N - F I C T I O N Michał Głombiowski Come to Zócalo in the Evening Wieczorem przyjdź na zócalo Keynote Tastes, colors, and sounds unknown to Europe: a picturesque road novel displaying the beauty of Central America Sales points •Written for experienced travelers, and for those who only dream of remote escapades •The publishing debut by an author of a popular travel blog Description Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 364 Category: Travel Rights available: World An incredible journey that takes several months, through unknown lands of Central America – Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras. Encounter tastes, smells, places and customs. A slow journey from place to place. Conversations and observations of people’s everyday lives. Mountains, exotic nature, bustling cities, the remains of Mayan culture, volcanoes, Natives, and Caribbean people. Crime mixed with ingenuity, poverty mixed with a sense of freedom, the kingdom of coffee and bananas. Avoiding the hubbub of the tourists, Michał Głombiowski and a mysterious girlfriend reach places only dreamed of by real and virtual travelers: places slightly forgotten, off the beaten track, but which show the real face of the countries at hand. After an exhausting day, the writer sits in a Zócalo, a central square in the local cities, and watches the street musicians, shopkeepers, Natives trading handmade clothing and toys made of rags, the fishermen and the owners of the local fleabag hotels. This is an essential addition to the library of every lover of travel and adventure. Target market Lovers of travel books, Latin American culture, Native heritage, and travelers; a good vacation read. 189 NO N - F I C T I O N Tomasz Grzywaczewski Tomasz Grzywaczewski (b. 1986) is a traveler and a reporter. He graduated from Łódź University with a degree in law. As a reporter he has worked with Wprost and Dziennik Gazeta Prawna, and has published in numerous magazines. He conceived the Long Walk PLUS Expedition – a well publicized journey in the footsteps of Witold Gliński’s escape from a gulag, and co-created the documentary film on the same expedition. He is passionate about searching for and discovering forgotten stories. In 2012 he joined Belgian traveler LouisPhilippe Loncke in organizing the Poland Trek from the Tatra Mountains to the Baltic Sea to promote the beauty of Poland’s wilderness. 190 NO N - F I C T I O N Tomasz Grzywaczewski Through the Wild East. 8000 Kilometre Journey Following the Footsteps of a Famous Esccape from Gulag Przez Dziki Wschód. 8000 km śladami słynnej ucieczki z gułagu Keynote Wild places, remarkable people, and dangers: an extreme journey from Yakutsk to Siberia, through the Taiga, Buryatia, Mongolia, the Gobi Desert, China, Tibet, the Himalayas, Nepal, and India – ending in Calcutta. Sales points Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 444 Category: Travel Rights available: World •The author sets off in the footsteps of Sławomir Rawicz’s bestselling The Long March, on whose basis Peter Weir made the famous film The Way Back •A book that generated great interest even before it was released •Through the Wild East pays tribute to the forgotten tale of Witold Gliński – a real-life hero of this impossible journey seventy years ago Description A powerful reportage/adventure book, ideal for travelers and people with adrenaline, and also for those who only dream of travel and adventure. May 2010: a trio of friends set off on a six-month journey, following the path of Polish war veteran Witold Gliński, and the protagonists of Sławomir Rawicz’s The Long March. Their journey becomes famous: and small wonder, because the conditions are extreme! Tomasz Grzywaczewski, Filip Drożdż, and Bartosz Malinowski covered the road on foot, on horseback, by bicycle, and by boat – a sum total of 8,000 kilometers! They were driven by a yearning for adventure, to test their strength, and to feel that they were doing something of importance. Their route leads from Yakutsk to Siberia, through the Taiga, Buryatia, Mongolia, the Gobi Desert, China, Tibet, the Himalayas, Nepal, and India, ending in Calcutta. Strength of spirit, courage, and manhood, and above all, a great desire for freedom – what could be better material for an unforgettable, epic novel? “We wanted to recall this remarkable story, and pay tribute to the Poles sent to ‚the edges of the earth.’ Traveling on foot, on horseback, or by bicycle, we relived the route journeyed by the participants of the great escape seventy years ago.” Tomasz Grzywaczewski “Seventy years after the fact, Tomasz Grzywaczewski has decided to repeat Gliński’s feat. Or to beat him, in fact, because his route took him from Yakutsk to Calcutta; he and Filip Drożdż and Bartosz Malinowski covered 8,000 kilometers. The record of this six-month journey makes for truly incredible reading.” 191 Witold Lada, Uważam Rze Inaczej Pisane NO N - F I C T I O N “The author shows us fascinating, virginal, wild, and yet terrifying landscapes and places. The incredibly visual descriptions are matched by a large number of brilliant photographs. These are a major plus of the book. When we look at them we feel as though we are taking part in this murderous expedition. I had fixed before my eyes those endless, uninhabited lands, and in my mind I saw Witold Gliński’s struggles, wandering hungry, frozen, and terrified for so many months. Man is able to endure a great deal. Highly recommended.” A reader’s review from empik.com “This book is a fascinating account of an incredible journey.” Paweł Stachnik, Dziennik Polski “Through the Wild East is a book filled with adventure and passion. A book that does not let us sit still. It is inspiring and urges us to travel.” Dziennik Polski Magnes Target market Readers of travel books and reportage; travelers interested in extremes journeys; readers interested in the history of Poland 192 NO N - F I C T I O N Barbara Włodarczyk Barbara Włodarczyk (b. 1960) is a television journalist who has received many awards. She graduated from the Journalism and Political Sciences Department of Warsaw University. From 2004–2009 she was a TVP correspondent in Moscow, and at present is a political commentator for TVP. In the Wide Rails series she wrote over one hundred pieces of reportage devoted to the lives of the inhabitants of the former USSR. The series received awards including the Grand Press and The International Chicago Television Awards in the documentary film categories. 193 NO N - F I C T I O N Barbara Włodarczyk There Is No One Russia Nie ma jednej Rosji Keynote A wild panorama of Russia – a country of contrasts and paradoxes, melancholy and madness, full of odd events and unusual protagonists. Sales points •A journalist who has received many awards. •A book written on the basis of the famous Wide Rails television reportage series. Description Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 356 Category: Travel Rights available: World A little-known and fascinating part of the „Russian soul” seen through the eyes of Barbara Włodarczyk, a journalist much admired for her television reportage on Russia. In this book Russia goes well beyond Moscow and the glamor of the capital city. The journalist peeks in on teenagers learning to shoot at the Moscow cadets’ school for girls, follows the story of a girl kidnapped in Dagestan, and in the village of Nizhnyevasilyevka she meets a millionaire who had a sudden religious conversion. The protagonists of her tales are seemingly average people, and yet can be astonishing, much like the times they live in. Their trials are followed with growing interest, and the Russian kaleidoscope only becomes more fascinating as the perspectives multiply. Barbara Włodarczyk is a masterful chronicler of human lives. „I had already seen the brilliant television reportage, now I’m devouring the book: There Is No One Russia. The author managed to reach not only people for whom the word ‚democracy’ means the anarchy of the Yeltsin days, a lack of social security and extreme poverty, but also those who had an easy time of it in the new system. People who are reluctant to open the door to strangers, all the more so when they see a camera. Reading Barbara Włodarczyk’s book one gets the impression that the author knows Russia inside-out, which is why there is neither xenophobia nor condescension. A great read! Highly recommended.” Jerzy Hoffman 194 „These are the portraits of a few people… But the portraits contain all of Russia – the world’s largest country, browbeaten by authoritarianism, divided into over a dozen planets. There is the planet of millionaire oligarchs, show–business and New-Yorkstyle glitter. There is also the planet of desperates, in the world’s largest pensioners’ home, and ‚głubinka,’ which is cut off from civilization. Włodarczyk masterfully shows the mirage of planets that make up today’s Russia. And though she does not write about politics, it appears nonetheless in the narratives of her protagonists – Putin lovers, neo-fascists, and those hoping for a ‚Russia without Putin.’ Reading all NO N - F I C T I O N of these tales we form the conviction that there are many planets from Kaliningrad to Siberia, and many Russias.” Małgorzata Nocuń, Nowa Europa Wschodnia „This is a fairly explosive patchwork full of contrasts. The journalist tracks down the absurd, which is in no short supply in the former USSR; she describes a religious cult that praises Vladimir Putin as an incarnation of Saint Paul, the Potemkin Village of Mansurovo, which was changed beyond recognition before the visit of Dmitri Medvedev, and rich people who get their kicks by pretending to be poor. She addresses the adoration Russians feel for those more powerful than themselves, and their vast need to demonstrate their power. Włodarczyk has made some brilliant expeditions into the depths of the ‘Russian soul,’ described in an unpretentious fashion; they speak more of Mother Russia than academic essays could. You won’t regret the time spent.” Hanna Rydlewska, Przekrój Target market Lovers of reportage, readers of non-fiction, those interested in the history and day-to-day life of Russia 195 PO E T RY Ewa Lipska Ewa Lipska was born in 1945 in Krakow. She is one of the most celebrated poets whose works stimulate the readers intellectually as well as are considered to be widely accessible to general public. Her poems were first published in Gazeta Krakowska while she was still in high school in 1961. She is a member of Polish and Austrian PEN Club, the Polish Academy of Arts and Sciences as well as a member – founder of The Association of Polish Writers.She was an editor at the poetry department at Wydawnictwo Literackie. She worked at the Polish embassy in Vienna and was a head of the Polish Institute there. She currently lives and works in Krakow. She has received up to date numerous literary awards and has participated in many international festivals of poetry. Her poems are widely translated and have appeared in over forty collections. Her recent volumes of verse include Newton’s Orange (2007), Echo (2010) and Dear Ms Schubert (2012). She published her first novel – Sefer – in 2009. 196 PO E T RY Ewa Lipska Dear Ms. Schubert Droga pani Schubert Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 64 Category: Poetry Rights available: World 197 The eponymous Ms. Schubert appeared for the first time in the II part of Ludzie dla początkujących (People for Beginners). The latest book is a series of twenty three “letters” addressed to “Dear Ms. Schubert” and – to quote professor Marian Stala – “rather quasi-letters, letters-poems written in prose, which are concise and highly metaphorical and whose leading theme is the intangibility of the internal and external experience, a peculiar distraction of time… Lipska’s poetical prose is as much replete with meanings and as disturbing as her poems. It is impossible to grasp them in one reading, they are worth returning to, thinking into them, looking through their perspective at the world around. It has always been like this with exquisite poetry.” PO E T RY Ewa Lipska Echo Pogłos Keynote The long-awaited return of one of Poland’s most celebrated poets. Sales points • A living classic of Polish literature, whose work only continues to mature. • Poetry that is both intellectually rewarding and widely accessible. Description Date of publication: 2010 Pages: 56 Category: Poetry Rights available: World In her native Poland, each new volume of Ewa Lipska’s poetry is a publishing event, eagerly awaited by readers and critics alike. Echo, a slim volume of eighteen poems interspersed with short prose-poems, has been no exception to this rule. The prose poems are affectionate letters to Franz Schubert, alternately filled with a longing and nostalgia for a simpler, more tranquil reality, and expressing a desire for the tragic drama felt in opera. The poems “proper” often deal with the subject of Lipska’s homeland, and the yearning to gain some distance from it. As such, they are much more than reflections on Polish identity; Lipska is wise enough to universalize her work to deal with the connection between the individual and the national identity. The other major theme of Echo concerns death, which appears in numerous guises, whether a looming presence, or a dog left tied outside a shop, muzzled but patiently waiting. As Professor Marian Stala has summed up: “Ewa Lipska’s latest volume is the ever-revitalizing, intense poetry well all know so well, the kind that demands repeated readings. The “echo” of the title is a metaphor for the stubborn return of the past. It is an invitation to think over your own life, to look at the space and the time of existence once more, to look at oneself and at others.” This is the Lipska I like. I’d advise all beginning poets [...] to start reading her work. Malgorzata I. Niemczynska, Gazeta Wyborcza One of our most outstanding contemporary poets has made us wait a long time for her new book. But it was well worth the wait. As usual, her wise and beautiful poems delight with their profound reflections on passing, life and death, and love – including love of one’s homeland. Gala Target market Those looking for a confident, assured, and deeply intelligent voice in contemporary poetry. 198 PO E T RY Piotr Matywiecki Piotr Matywiecki (b. 1943) is an eminent author of volumes of verse, an essayist and a literary critic. His collection of poems – Ta chmura powraca – was shortlisted for the Nike Prize in 2006 and his biography of Julian Tuwim entitled Tuwim’s Face was shortlisted for the same prize in 2008.It also received Nagroda Literacka Gdynia in the essay category. 199 PO E T RY Piotr Matywiecki The Audience Widownia Keynote Contemporary poetry for the discerning reader by a contemporary master of the form. Sales points • Winner of the Silesius and the Gdynia awards, and nominee for the Nike and Gdynia • A poet of the older generation in top form Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: to come Category: Poetry Rights available: World Matywiecki’s poetry demands a great deal of concentration from the reader, but the effort pays off in spades. The poet sets out on his project with a great deal of focus; he is always distrustful of language, suspicious of philosophical slogans and thought cliches. The “Audience” of the title can be taken as metaphor for the situation the poet participates in. The paradoxes that Matywiecki culls from language serve to show numerous ruptures in our understanding of the world and ourselves, our understanding of history and memory. The audience is a place where observers, including the poet himself, are placed at the mercy of the ongoing spectacle – but also where the poet can look to find someone to listen. Matywiecki here reaffirms his reputation as one of Poland’s most thought-provoking and conscious contemporary poets. The Audience should be shelved with lyrical/meditative poetry, strongly tied to the historical, existential, and artistic experience of the individual. This is a book for all those in search of a book of profound thoughts and moving experiences. These readers will appreciate how outstanding Piotr Matywiecki’s work is. Marian Stala Target market Readers of challenging, ambitious contemporary poetry. 200 PO E T RY Jarosław Mikołajewski Jarosław Mikołajewski (b. 1960) — a poet, writer, and translator from the Italian; he writes on literature and art. He is the author of six volumes of poetry, as well as novels. His poems have been translated into Italian, German, Hebrew, and Greek. He has won many prestigious award. He is also a journalist at Gazeta Wyborcza. AWARDS Kazimiera Iłłakowiczówna Poetry Award Brother Albert Award The Barbara Sadowska Literary Award The New Poets’ Neighborhood Award OTHER BOOKS FOR WL: Tea for a Camel A Sentimental Portrait of Ryszard Kapuściński The Male Sense 201 PO E T RY Jarosław Mikołajewski Broken Glasses Zbite szklanki Keynote A master of poetry hits the mark with a minimum of words Sales points •One of Poland’s most praised contemporary poets •Winner of many prestigious awards •His poetry has been translated into many languages Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 92 Category: Poetry Rights available: World A new volume of poetry by one of Poland’s most highly praised contemporary poets. “Your poems have found not only recognition in my eyes, but in me you have a true lover of your poetry. What strikes me is the simplicity which is generally achieved after many years of struggling, generally just prior to death. There is a certain danger here of being too literal, but you – with the help of our God Apollo – happily avoid this trap…” Zbigniew Herbert to Jarosław Mikołajewski “In terms of the density of emotion, Mikołajewski’s most recent volumes exceed the work of all our other poets. Alongside the joy of life we find a premonition of death – almost every poem runs through the entire gamut of moods, from joyful vitality to despairing melancholy. This poet can be a magician, an illusionist – he knows the power of fascination, he seduces.” Piotr Matywiecki, poet and literary critic Target market Lovers of contemporary Polish poety. 202 PO E T RY Jarosław Mikołajewski On the Inhalation Na wdechu Keynote The latest volume of poetry from Jarosław Mikołajewski Description Mikołajewski is a lyricist by the grace of God. It cannot be overestimated that here we have a poet with an original, immediate voice – in a time when most poems are written by parodists who play with conventions, ironists, or “banalists.” If poetry is indeed a “sign of the times,” then Mikołajewski’s works indicate that the need for purity of emotions, perhaps even sentimentality, has not utterly vanished. And more importantly, these works evoke and cultivate a similar sentimentality. Amid today’s brutality this is an enormous advantage. Date of publication: forthcoming Pages: 44 Category: Poetry Rights available: World Piotr Matywiecki Target market Lovers of contemporary Polish poetry. 203 PO E T RY Adam Waga Limping Chromając Sales points •Top-shelf Polish poetry and artistic prose. Description An endearing volume of poetry by Adam Waga, in which philosophical questions intermingle with pondering over one’s fate and flowing of time. It draws on the literary tradition, the Bible and, together with this poetic remembering about the loved ones and artists who are important for the author, the whole volume forms a very personal expression of thought, where the reflection on the meaning of life and death takes the centre stage. Date of publication: 2013 Pages: 56 Category: Poetry Rights available: World 204 Target market Lovers of contemporary Polish poetry. PO E T RY Adam Waga Obolus Obol Marian Pilot Final Resolutions Postanowienia końcowe Sales points •Top-shelf Polish poetry and artistic prose. Description Date of publication: 2012 Pages: 76 Category: Poetry Rights available: World A reprint of a collection of poems by Klemens Górski (writing under the pseudonym Adam Waga) with a short story by Marian Pilot, as a commentary of sorts upon his friend’s poem “A Trifle,” addressing the motifs of time passing, and of a boat. Target market Lovers of contemporary Polish poetry. 205 List of Authors Available for Translation 206 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. Aleksandrowicz Julian, „Kartki z dziennika doktora Twardego” Anderman Janusz, „Fotografie” Anderman Janusz, „Gra na zwłokę” Anderman Janusz „Łańcuch czystych serc” Anderman Janusz, „Największy słoń na świecie” Anderman Janusz, „Cały czas” Axer Erwin, „Czwarte ćwiczenia pamięci” Baniewicz Elżbieta, „Erwin Axer. Teatr słowa i myśli” Bartoszewski Władysław, Rogulski Rafał & Rydel Jan, „O Niemcach i Polakach” Bauman Zygmunt, Obirek Stanisław, „O Bogu i człowieku: rozmowy” Bereś Stanisław, Konwicki Tadeusz, „Pół wieku czyśćca” Bikont Piotr, Makłowicz Robert, „Listy pieczętowane sosem, czyli gdzie karmią najlepiej w Polsce” Błoński Jan, „25 kawałków” Błoński Jan, „Biedni Polacy patrzą na getto” Błoński Jan, „Witkacy za zawsze” Błoński Jan, „Wszystkie sztuki Sławomira Mrożka” Błoński Jan, „Wybór pism” t. 1–3 Bocheński Jacek, „Kaprysy starszego pana” Bolecki Włodzimierz, „Ciemna miłość. Szkice do portretu Gustawa Herlinga-Grudzińskiego” Bomba Jacek, Terakowska Dorota, „Być rodziną”, volume 1 and 2 Borkowska Grażyna, „Maria Dąbrowska i Jerzy Stempowski” Borkowska Grażyna, „Nierozważna i nieromantyczna. O Halinie Poświatowskiej” Boy Tadeusz, „Słówka”, selected by H. Markiewicz Bronner Irena, „Cykady nad Wisłą i Jordanem” Brylewski Robert, „Kryzys w Babilonie. Autobiografia” Burzyńska Anna, „Ostatnia miłość i inne kłopoty” Chętkowski Dariusz, „L.d.d.w. – osierocona generacja” Chętkowski Dariusz, „Z budy. Czy spuścić ucznia z łańcucha?” Chrzanowski Tadeusz, „Kresy” Chwalba Andrzej, „Samobójstwo Europy, czyli I wojna światowa” Czapliński Przemysław, „Efekt bierności. Literatura w czasie normalnym” Czapliński Przemysław, Leciński Maciej, Szybowicz Eliza, Warkocki Błażej, „Kalendarium życia literackiego 1976–2000” Czapliński Przemysław, „Ślady przełomu” Czapliński Przemysław, „Wzniosłe tęsknoty” Ćwięk Henryk, „Rotmistrz Sosnowski” 207 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. Dasko Henryk, „Dworzec gdański” Długosz Leszek, „Dusza na ramieniu” (with a CD) Długosz Leszek, „Piwnica idzie do góry” Dudzińska Magda, Dudziński Andrzej, „Mały alfabet Magdy i Andrzeja Dudzińskich” Dudziński Andrzej, „Pokrak” Dyduch Grzegorz, Świetlicki Marcin, „Katecheci i frustraci” Dygat Stanisław, „Podróż” Dygat Stanisław, „Rozmyślania przy goleniu” Dygat-Dudzińska Magda, „Biedna pani Morris” Dygat-Dudzińska Magda, „Kupić dym, sprzedać mgłę’” Dygat-Dudzińska Magda, „Rozstania” Elektorowicz Leszek, „Niektóre stronice. Wiersze wybrane” Fabiański Marcin, „Drugi Rzym” Ficowski Jerzy „Pantareja” Ficowski Jerzy, „Zawczas z poniewczasem” Filipiak Izabela, „Alma” Filipowicz Kornel, „Cienie” Fox Marta, „Kobieta zaklęta w kamień” Fox Marta, „Zuzanna nie istnieje” Franczak Jerzy, „Da capo” Franczak Jerzy, „Nieludzka komedia” Gabryś Mirosław, „Zwłoki monterów idą w miasto” Galewicz Włodzimierz, „Sokrates i Kirke” Galewicz Włodzimierz, „Z Arystotelesem przez greckie tragedie” Garbicz Adam, „Kino – wehikuł magiczny” Glensk Urszula, „Proza wyzwolonej generacji” Głombiowski Michał, „Wieczorem przyjdź na zócalo” Głowiński Michał, „Autobiografia” Głowiński Michał, „Czarne sezony” Głowiński Michał, „Gombrowicz i nadliteratura” Głowiński Michał, „Historia jednej topoli” Głowiński Michał, „Magdalenka z razowego chleba” Głowiński Michał, „Przywidzenia i figury” Głowiński Michał, „Skrzydła i pięta” Grochola Katarzyna, „Cud w eterze” (excluding World English rights) Grochola Katarzyna, „Houston, mamy problem” (excluding World English rights) Grochola Katarzyna, Wiśniewski Andrzej, „Gry i zabawy małżeńskie i pozamałżeńskie” Grochola Katarzyna, „Kryształowy Anioł” (excluding World English rights) Grochola Katarzyna, Szelągowska Dorota, „Makatka” (excluding Word English rights) Grochola Katarzyna, „Podanie o miłość” (excluding World English rights) Grochola Katarzyna, „Przegryźć dżdżownicę” (excluding World English rights) 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. 101. 102. 103. 104. 105. 106. 107. 108. 109. 110. 111. 112. 113. 114. 115. 116. 117. 208 118. Grochola Katarzyna, „Trochę większy poniedziałek” (excluding World English rights) Grochola Katarzyna, „Trzepot skrzydeł” (excluding World English rights) Grochola Katarzyna, „Upoważnienie do szczęścia” (excluding World English rights) Grochola Katarzyna, „Zielone drzwi” (excluding World English rights) Grochola Katarzyna, Wiśniewski Andrzej, „Związki i rozwiązki miłosne” Gross Natan, „Kim pan jest, panie Grymek” Grzegorzewska Gaja, „Powrót” Grupińska Anka, „Odczytanie Listy. Opowieść o powstańcach żydowskich” Górski Klemens, „Obol” Grzywaczewski Tomasz, „Przez dziki wschód. 800 km śladami słynnej ucieczki z gułagu” Gutowski Wojciech, „Z próżni nieba ku religii życia” Harasymowicz Jerzy, „Późne lato” Hartwig Julia, „Dzienniki” Hennelowa Józefa, „O Kościele” Herling-Grudziński Gustaw, „Przewodnik po sobie samym” Huberach Marek S., „Balsam długiego pożegnania” Huberath Marek S., „Miasta pod Skałą” Hubertah Marek S., „Vatran Auraio” Janowska Katarzyna, Bomba Jacek, „Rozmowy o seksie i seksualności” Jan Paweł II, „Autobiografia” Jan Paweł II, „Elementarz Jana Pawła II, cz. I i II” Janko Anna, „Dziewczynka z zapałkami” (excluding German rights) Janko Anna, „Mała Zagłada” Janko Anna, „Pasja według świętej Hanki” (excluding German rights” Jarzębski Jerzy, „Wszechświat Lema” Jastrun Mieczysław, „Dzienniki” Jeromin-Gałuszka Grażyna, „Nie zostawiaj mnie” Jurewicz Aleksander, „Dzień przed końcem świata” Kaczmarek Ryszard, „Polacy w armii Kajzera” Kaczmarek Ryszard, „Polacy w Wermachcie” Kajdański Edward, „Medycyna chińska dla każdego” Kamińska Anna, „Adoptowani” Karpiński Daniel, „Fikcja” Karpowicz Ignacy, „Balladyny i romanse” Karpowicz Ignacy, „Cud” Karpowicz Ignacy, „Gesty” Karpowicz Ignacy, „Niehalo” Karpowicz Ignacy, „Ości” Karpowicz Ignacy, „Sońka” Kasdepke Grzegorz, „Sprzedawca uśmiechów. Poradnik hodowcy aniołów aniołów” Kępiński Antoni, „Autoportret człowieka” Kępiński Antoni, „Jak leczyć i poznawać człowieka” 119. 120. 121. 122. 123. 124. 125. 126. 127. 128. 129. 130. 131. 132. 133. 134. 135. 136. 137. 138. 139. 140. 141. 142. 143. 144. 145. 146. 147. 148. 149. 150. 151. 152. 153. 154. 155. 156. 157. 158. 159. 160. 161. 162. 163. 164. 209 165. Kępiński Antoni, „Lęk” Kępiński Antoni, „Podstawowe zagadnienia współczesnej psychiatrii” Kępiński Antoni, „Poznanie chorego” Kępiński Antoni, „Psychopatie” Kępiński Antoni, „Psychopatologia nerwic” Kępiński Antoni, „Rytm życia” Kępiński Antoni, „Schizofrenia” Kępiński Antoni, „Z psychopatologii życia seksualnego” Kern Ludwik Jerzy, „Abecadłowo” Kern Ludwik Jerzy, „Cztery łapy” Kern Ludwik Jerzy, „Dyskretne podglądanie rodaków” Kern Ludwik Jerzy, „Ferdynand Wspaniały” Kern Ludwik Jerzy, „Imiona nadwiślańskie” Kern Ludwik Jerzy, „Litery cztery Kern Ludwik Jerzy, „Zbudź się, Ferdynandzie” Klejnocki Jarosław, „Opcje na śmierć” Klejnocki Jarosław, „Południk 21” Kłoczowski Jan Andrzej, Badeni Joachim, Jan Strzałka, Artur Sporniak, „Boskie oko” Kobza Piotr, „Polskie rekolekcje” Koehler Krzysztof, „Trzecia część” Komar Michał, Petelicki Stanisław, „Generał Grom” Komendołowicz Iza, „Elka” Kopka Bogusław, „Gułag nad Wisłą” Kornhauser Julian, „Księżyc jak mandarynka” Kornhauser Julian, „Poezja i codzienność” Kornhauser Julian, „Uśmiech Sfinksa. O poezji Zbigniewa Herberta” Kott Jan, „Szekspir współczesny” Kott Jan, „Szekspir współczesny 2” Kowal Paweł, „Pomiędzy Majdanem a Smoleńskiem. Rozmawiają Paweł Legutko i Dobrosław Rodziewicz” Kowalewski Włodzimierz, „Ludzie moralni” Kozioł Urszula, „Deseń” Kozioł Urszula, „Supliki” Krajewski Kazimierz, „Armia Krajowa na Wschodzie” Kraskowska Ewa, „Siostry Brönte” Krenz Katarzyna, „Lekcja tańca” Krenz Katarzyna, „Podróż” Krupiński Wacław, „Głowy piwniczne” Kruszyński Zbigniew, „Ostatni raport” Kruszyński Zbigniew, „Powrót Aleksandra” Kruszyński Zbigniew, „Szkice historyczne” Kubica-Heller Grażyna, „Siostry Malinowskiego” Kuryluk Ewa, „Frascati” (excluding English rights) Kuryluk Ewa, „Goldi” Kwiatkowski Tadeusz, „Lunapark” Kydryński Lucjan, „Kroniki rodzinne” Legutko Piotr (ed.), „Rozmowy o dorastaniu” 166. 167. 168. 169. 170. 171. 172. 173. 174. 175. 176. 177. 178. 179. 180. 181. 182. 183. 184. 185. 186. 187. 188. 189. 190. 191. 192. 193. 194. 195. 196. 197. 198. 199. 200. 201. 202. 203. 204. 205. 206. 207. 208. 209. 210. 211. 210 212. Legutko Piotr, Rodziewicz Dobrosław, „Mity czwartej władzy” Leociak Jacek, „O ratujących z Zagłady” Ligęza Wojciech, „O poezji Wisławy Szymborskiej. Świat w stanie korekty” Lipska Ewa, „1999” Lipska Ewa, „Droga pani Schubert” Lipska Ewa, „Gdzie Indziej” Lipska Ewa, „Ja” Lipska Ewa, „Pogłos” Lipska Ewa, „Pomarańcza Newtona” Lipska Ewa, „Sefer” Lipska Ewa, „Sklepy zoologiczne” Lipska Ewa, „Uwaga: stopień” Lisowski Krzysztof, „Feng shui dla bezdomnych” Lupa Krystian, Matkowska-Święs Beata, „Podróż do Nieuchwytnego” Lupa Krystian, „Utopia 2. Penetracje” Łopuszański Piotr, „Leśmianowie” Madej Bogdan, „Abonament” Madej Bogdan, „Maść na szczury” Madej Bogdan, „Piękne kalalie” Madeyska Ewa, „Katoniela” Maicher Katarzyna, Persymona Majewski Lech, „Metafizyka” Makowski Jarosław (ed.), „Dziesięć ważnych słów” Maleńczuk Maciej, „Chamstwo w państwie” Małecki Jan, „Historia Krakowa” Margański Janusz, „Geografia pragnień. Opowieść o Gombrowiczu” Markiewicz Henryk, „Cytaty mądre i zabawne” Markiewicz Henryk, „Jeszcze dopowiedzenia” Markiewicz Henryk, „Mój życiorys polonistyczny z historią w tle” Markiewicz Henryk, Romanowski Andrzej, „Skrzydlate słowa” Markowski Michał Paweł, „Anatomia ciekawości” Markowski Michał Paweł, „Czarny nurt. Gombrowicz, świat, literatura” Masłowska Dorota, Drotkiewicz Agnieszka, „Dusza światowa” Masłoń Krzysztof, „Lekcja historii najnowszej” Maślanka Mariusz, „Jutro będzie lepiej” Mateja Anna, „Cud w medycynie” Mateja Anna, „Cud w medycynie – historie pacjentów” Matkowska-Święs Beata, „Krakowskie gadanie” Matywiecki Piotr, „Powietrze i cień” Matywiecki Piotr, „Ta chmura powraca” Matywiecki Piotr, „Widownia” Michalak Katarzyna, „Gra o Ferrin” Michalak Katarzyna, „Powrót do Ferrinu” Michalak Katarzyna, „Wojna o Ferrin” Michalak Katarzyna, „Pani Ferrinu” Michalak Katarzyna, „Lato w Jagódce” Michalak Katarzyna, „Powrót do Poziomki” 213. 214. 215. 216. 217. 218. 219. 220. 221. 222. 223. 224. 225. 226. 227. 228. 229. 230. 231. 232. 233. 234. 235. 236. 237. 238. 239. 240. 241. 242. 243. 244. 245. 246. 247. 248. 249. 250. 251. 252. 253. 254. 255. 256. 257. 211 258. Michalak Katarzyna, „Rok w Poziomce” Michalak Katarzyna, „Wiśniowy dworek” Michalska Francesca, „Cała radość życia’ Michałowska Danuta, „Pamięć nie zawsze święta. Wspomnienia” Miecznicka Magdalena, „Cudowna kariera Magdy M” Miecznicka Magdalena, „Złość” Mikołajewski Jarosław, „Herbata dla wielbłąda” Mikołajewski Jarosław, „Męski zmysł” Mikołajewski Jarosław, „ Na wdechu” Mikołajewski Jarosław, „Zbite szklanki” Mikrut Grzegorz, Wiktor Krzysztof, „Sekty za zamkniętymi drzwiami” Miłaszewski Stanisław, „Poezje” Mitosek Zofia, „Pelargonie” Moczulski Leszek Aleksander, „Jej nigdy za późno” Motyka Grzegorz, „Od rzezi wołyńskiej do akcji „Wisła”. Konflikt polsko – ukraiński 1943-1947” Mrożek Sławomir, Tarn Andrzej, „Listy” Musiał Stanisław, „Dwanaście koszy ułomków” Musiał Stanisław, „Czarne jest czarne” Komendołowicz Iza, „Elka. Wspomnienie o Elżbiecie Czyżewskiej” Nasiłowska Anna, „Czteroletnia filozofka” Nasiłowska Anna, „Jean Paul Sartre i Simone de Beauvoir” Nowak Ewa, „Bransoletka” Nowak Katarzyna, „Kasika Mowka” Nowak Katarzyna T., „Moja mama czarownica. Opowieść o Dorocie Terakowskiej” Nyczek Tadeusz, „Kos. O poezji Adama Zagajewskiego” Odija Daniel, „Niech to nie będzie sen” OleśOwczarkowa Teresa, „Rauska” Olszewski Michał, „Low tech” Orbitowski Łukasz, „Nadchodzi” Orbitowski Łukasz, „Swięty Wrocław” Orbitowski Łukasz, „Tracę ciepło” Orłoś Kazimierz, „Bez Ciebie nie mogę żyć” Orłoś Kazimierz, „Dom pod Lutnią” Orłoś Kazimierz, „Drewniane mosty” Orłoś Kazimierz, „Historia leśnych kochanków i innne opowiadania” Orłoś Kazimierz, „Opowieść mazurska” Orłoś Kazimierz, „Wspomnienia rodzinne” Ostaszewski Robert, „Dola idola i inne bajki z raju konsumenta” Orwid Maria, „Przeżyć… I co dalej?” Orwid Maria „Trauma” Paczkowski Andrzej, „Droga do mniejszego zła” Penderecki Krzysztof, „Pendereccy. Saga rodzinna” Pankiewicz Tadeusz, „Apteka w getcie krakowskim” Peiper Tadeusz, „Wśród ludzi na scenach” Pepłoński Andrzej, „Wojna o tajemnice. W tajnej służbie Drugiej Rzeczpospolitej 1918–1944” Petelicki Sławomir, Michał Komar, „GROM: Siła i honor” 259. 260. 261. 262. 263. 264. 265. 266. 267. 268. 269. 270. 271. 272. 273. 274. 275. 276. 277. 278. 279. 280. 281. 282. 283. 284. 285. 286. 287. 288. 289. 290. 291. 292. 293. 294. 295. 296. 297. 298. 299. 300. 301. 302. 303. 304. 212 305. Pilch Jerzy, „Bezpowrotnie utracona leworęczność” Pilch Jerzy, „Rozpacz z powodu utraty furmanki” Pilch Jerzy, „Spis cudzołożnic” Pilch Jerzy, „Tezy o głupocie, piciu i umieraniu” Pilch Jerzy, „Tysiąc spokojnych miast” Pilch Jerzy, „Upadek człowieka pod Dworcem Centralnym” Pilch Jerzy, „Wyznania twórcy pokątnej literatury erotycznej” Pilot Marian, „Nowy Matecznik” Pilot Marian, „Osobnik” Pilot Marian, „Pantałyk” Pilot Marian, „Pióropusz” Piskorski Krzysztof, „Cienioryt” Podraza-Kwiatkowska Maria, „Wolność i transcendencja” Porębski Mieczysław, „Krytycy i sztuka” Porębski Mieczysław, „Nowosielski” Porębski Mieczysław, „Polskość jako sytuacja” Porębski Mieczysław, „Spotkanie z Ablem” Porębski Mieczysław, „Wakacje Sinobrodego” Polkowski Jan, „Elegie z Tymowskich Gór” Protasiuk Michał, „Święto rewolucji” Praca Zbiorowa, „Kalendarium dziejów Polski” Przygodzki Błażej, „Z chirurgiczna precyzją” Pszoniak Wojciech, Komar Michał, „Rozmowy” Purchla Jacek, „Przewodnik po architekturze Krakowa” Pyrkosz Witold, Grużewska Anna, Komendołowicz Iza, „Podwójnieurodzony” Rogowski Sławomir, „Zima stulecia” Rolicz-Lieder Wacław, „Wybór poezji” Romanowski Wiesław, „Śmierć we Lwowie” Romanowski Wiesław, „Ukraina. Przystanek wolność” Ronikier Adam, „Pamiętniki” Ronikier Joanna, „Piotr” Różewicz Tadeusz, „Duszyczka” Sadaj Ryszard, „Terapia Pauliny T.” Sapieżyna Maria ze Zdzichowskich, „Moje życie, mój czas” Sapieżyna Matylda, „My i nasze Siedliska” Słomczyńska-Pierzchalska Małgorzata, „Nie mogłem być inny. Zagadka Macieja Słomczyńskiego” Sobolewska Anna, „Maski Pana Boga” Sosnowski Jerzy, „Ach!” Sosnowski Jerzy, „Instalacja Idziego” Sowa Andrzej Leon, „Historia polityczna Polski 1944–1991” Spodaryk Mikolaj, Gabrowska Elżbieta, „Wiem, co je moje dziecko” Stala Marian, „Przeszukiwanie czasu” Staniszkis Jadwiga, „O władzy i bezsilności” Staniszkis Jadwiga, Cieślar Artur, „Wschód i zachód. Spotkania” Stańko Tomasz, Księżyk Rafał, „Desperado! Autobiografia” Stawiarska Agnieszka, „Przedwojenny Gombrowicz” Stefko Jolanta, „Ja nikogo nie lubię oprócz siebie” 306. 307. 308. 309. 310. 311. 312. 313. 314. 315. 316. 317. 318. 319. 320. 321. 322. 323. 324. 325. 326. 327. 328. 329. 330. 331. 332. 333. 334. 335. 336. 337. 338. 339. 340. 341. 342. 343. 344. 345. 346. 347. 348. 349. 213 350. Stefko Jolanta, „Kolorowe wiersze” Stefko Jolanta, „Omnis moriar” Stefko Jolanta, „Pół książki o kocie, pół książki o psie” Stefko Jolanta, „Wódociąg” Stephan Halina, „Życie w przekładzie” Stryczek Jacek ks., „FaceBóg” Strzałka Jan, „O psach, kotach i aniołach” Strzałka Jan, Sporniak Artur, „Autobiografia – rozmowy z ojcem Badenim” Stuhr Jerzy, „Stuhrowie. Historie rodzinne” Stuhr Jerzy, „Tak sobie myślę” Sumińska Dorota, „Autobiografia na czterech łapach” Sumińska Dorota, „Dalej na czterech łapach” Sumińska Dorota, „Jak jeż Jerzy został ojcem” Sumińska Dorota, Krzywicka Dorota, „Jak żyć w zgodzie z większymi i mniejszymi domownikami. Rozmawia Irena A. Stanisławska” Sumińska Dorota, „Świat według psa” Sumińska Dorota, „Zwierz w łóżku” Sumińska Dorota, „Zwykłe, niezwykłe życie” Szatkowska Anna, „Był dom … Wspomnienia” Szewc Piotr, „Całkiem prywatnie” Szczawiński Wojciech, „Myśli przy końcu drogi” Szczepański Jan Józef, „Przed Nieznanym Trybunałem” Szczepański Jan Józef, „Rozłogi” Szczepkowska Joanna, „Fragmenty z życia lustra” Szczepkowska Joanna, „Sześć minut przed czasem” Szczepkowska Joanna, „Goła baba” Szewc Piotr, „Bociany nad powiatem” Szewc Piotr, „Zmierzchy i poranki” Szlosarek Artur, „Wiersze powtórzone” Sztaudynger Jan, SztaudyngerKaliszewiczowi Anna, „Chwalipięta, czyli rozmowy z Tatą” Sztaudynger Jan, „Piórka” Sztaudynger Jan, „Puch ostu” Sztaudynger Jan, „Szczęście z datą wczorajszą” Szuber Janusz, „Wpis do ksiąg wieczystych”” Szymańska Adriana, „In terra” Szymborska Wisława, „Lektury nadobowiązkowe” ŚwidaZiemba Hanna, „Młodzież PRL-u. Portrety pokoleń” Świda-Ziemba Hanna, „Młodzi w nowym świecie” Świda-Ziemba Hanna, „Urwany lot” Terakowska Dorota, „Być rodziną, czyli jak zmieniamy się przez całe życie” Terakowska Dorota, „Córka czarownic” Terakowska Dorota, „Dobry adres to człowiek” Terakowska Dorota, „Lustro pana Grymsa” Terakowska Dorota, „Muzeum Rzeczy Nieistniejących” Terakowska Dorota, „Ono” Terakowska Dorota, „Poczwarka” 351. 352. 353. 354. 355. 356. 357. 358. 359. 360. 361. 362. 363. 364. 365. 366. 367. 368. 369. 370. 371. 372. 373. 374. 375. 376. 377. 378. 379. 380. 381. 382. 383. 384. 385. 386. 387. 388. 389. 390. 391. 392. 393. 394. 395. 214 396. Terakowska Dorota, „Samotność Bogów” Terakowska Dorota, „Tam gdzie spadają Anioły” Terakowska Dorota, „W krainie Kota” Terakowska Dorota, „Władca Lewawu” Terlecki Ryszard, „Profesorzy UJ w aktach SB” Terlecki Ryszard, „Historia służb specjalnych PRL-u” Tomaszewska Anna, „Wiersze do czytania” Tomaszewski Mieczysław, „Fryderyk Chopin i George Sand” Tymański Tymon, Księżyk Rafał, „Biografia Tymona Tymańskiego” Twardoch Szczepan, „Ziemia Kwadów” (excluding French rights) Twardoch Szczepan, „Morfina” (excluding French rights) Twardoch Szczepan, „Wieczny Grunwald” (excluding French rights) Twardowski Jan, „Abecadło ks. Jana Twardowskiego” Twardowski Jan, „Autobiografia”, ed. A. Iwanowska Twardowski Jan, „Elementarz księdza Twardowskiego dla najmłodszego, średniaka i starszego”, Ed. A. Iwanowska Waga Adam, „Chromając” Waga Adam, „Obol”/ Pilot Marian „Postanowienia końcowe” Walas Teresa, „Zrozumieć swój czas” Wałęsa Danuta, „Marzenia i tajemnice” Waniek Henryk, „Sprawa Newtona” Wencel Wojciech, „Ziemia Święta” Winklowa Barbara, „Wanda i Narcyza” Wiśniewski Janusz L., „Czy mężczyźni są światu potrzebni” Wiśniewski Janusz L. „Intymna Teoria Względności” Wiśniewski, Janusz L., „Moja bliskość największa” Wiśniewski Janusz L., „Molekuły emocji” Wiśniewski Janusz L., „Sceny z życia za ścianą” Wiśniewski Janusz L., „Ukrwienia” Włodarczyk Barbara, „Nie ma jednej Rosji” Włodek Ludwika, „Pra” Wołos Mariusz, „O Piłsudskim, Dmowskim i zamachu majowym. Dyplomacja sowiecka wobec Polski w okresie kryzysu politycznego 1925–1926” Woydyłło Ewa, „Buty szczęścia” Woydyłło Ewa, „O depresji” Woydyłło Ewa, „Podnieś głowę” Woydyłło Ewa, „Szczęśliwe życie” Woydyłło Ewa, „Z zgodzie ze sobą” Woźniak Maciej, „Iluzjon” Woleński Jan, „Granice niewiary” Wyka Marta, „Autobiografia” Wyka Kazmierz, „Wśród poetów” Wysocki Radek, „Human Tuman” Zając Andrzej, „Elementarz świętego Franciszka dla wszystkich, którzy mieszkają na całym świecie” Zaleski Marek, „Zamiast. O twórczości Czesława Miłosza” Zblewski Zbigniew „Wolność i Niezawisłość” Zechenter-Spławińska Elżbieta, „Pod gwiaździstym niebem” 397. 398. 399. 400. 401. 402. 403. 404. 405. 406. 407. 408. 215 Zettinger Piotr, „Nietutejszy” Ziemny Aleksander, „Późne sonety” Zimmerer Katarzyna, „Zamordowany świat. Losy Żydów w Krakowie 1939–1945” Zimmerer Katarzyna, Orwid Maria, „Nie wszystko opowiem” Zoll Andrzej, „Saga rodzinna” Żabińska Antonina, Borsunio” Żabińska Antonina, „Dżolly i Ska” Żabińska Antonina, „Ludzie i zwierzęta” Żabińska Antonina, „Rysice” Życiński Józef, „Elementarz księdza Życińskiego dla biskupa i świeckiego” Życiński Józef, „Odyseusz czy playboy? Życiowa odyseja człowieka” Życiński Józef, „Wiara wątpiących”