Yanek Yanowiec is awaiting trial. He has decided to set straight the record of his life. Wracked by guilt, he knows some terrible secrets, and with Yanek himself telling the story, the truth may never be known. His need for secrecy seems even more necessary when his dead father returns to haunt him.
This book doesn't make sense. The author jumps from one thing to the other and just rambles on and on...you don't know what is true and what not and at the end of the story you still don't know what to think about it. But it reads very fast. I read it in about 2-3 hours maximum.
Janek Janowiec is awaiting trial. In his cramped attic apartment in Krakow he has decided to set straight the record of his life, and yet he is wracked by the guilt and knowledge of a number of terrible secrets. What happened to his friend, the charismatic revolutionary leader, Fredzio? What exactly did his father do in the war? And where is his wife Rachel? With Janek himself telling the story the answers can never really be known and the need for secrecy seems ever more necessary when the voice of his dead father starts to visit him in his attic - goading and tormenting him, as he used to when Janek was a boy. Casting a revealing light on many of the neuroses of the late twentieth century, Skin is a gripping read that looks into the chilling mind of a man whose lies and obsessions spill shockingly across every page.