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Niets of niets

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Wat komt er terecht van de dromen en idealen van een individu? Heeft de mens wel de mogelijkheid om te kiezen of is dat slechts schone schijn en komt het leven in werkelijkheid neer op 'niets of niets'?
In zijn in 1971 in Polen officieel gepubliceerde roman 'Niets of niets' vertelt Tadeusz Konwicki het fascinerende verhaal van de veertigjarige Darek, die door de politie van moord wordt verdacht en op de vlucht slaat voor zijn eigen angsten, een vlucht die tegelijkertijd een zoektocht wordt naar zijn eigen identiteit.
In suggestieve scenes, die naar mate het verhaal vordert steeds meer op visioenen gaan lijken, wordt duidelijk dat van de hooggestemde verwachtingen die de hoofdpersoon en zijn vrienden tijdens de oorlog koesterden bitter weinig terecht is gekomen.
Bovendien blijkt dat de oorlogservaringen Darek getekend hebben en hem gemaakt hebben tot wat hij is: een (vermeende) lustmoordenaar.

274 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1971

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About the author

Tadeusz Konwicki

35 books106 followers
Prose writer, screenwriter and film director. Founder of the 'cinema d'auteur' in Poland and author of 20 books. Born in 1926 in Nowa Wilejka, near Vilnius (today Naujoji Vilnia, Lithuania), died on January 7th in Warsaw at 88 years old.

Konwicki was educated at the Universities of Cracow and Warsaw and began writing for newspapers and periodicals. He served on the editorial boards of leading literary magazines and followed the official Communist Party line. His first work, Przy budowie (1950; “At the Construction Site”), won the State Prize for Literature. He began a career as a filmmaker and scriptwriter in 1956; his film Ostatni dzień lata (“The Last Day of Summer”) won the Venice Film Festival Grand Prix in 1958. By the late 1960s he had quit the Communist Party, lost his job in the official film industry, and become active in the opposition movement.

Konwicki’s work is suffused with guilt and anxiety, coloured by his wartime experiences and a sense of helplessness in confronting a corrupt and repressive society. Chief among his novels are Rojsty (1956; “The Marshes”) and Sennik wspóczesny (1963; A Dreambook for Our Time), a book that writer and critic Czesław Miłosz called “one of the most terrifying novels of postwar Polish literature.” His other works of that period are Wniebowsta̦pienie (1967; “Ascension”) and Zwierzoczłekoupiór (1969; The Anthropos-Spectre-Beast). His later books—including Kompleks polski (1977; The Polish Complex), the bitterly mocking Mała apokalipsa (1979; A Minor Apocalypse), and the lyrical Bohiń (1987; Bohin Manor)—confront Poland’s social cataclysms of the late 1970s and the ’80s. The autobiographical Wschody i zachody ksie̦życa (1981; Moonrise, Moonset) recounts some of Konwicki’s experiences during the period of martial law in Poland.

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Profile Image for readbyjulia.
286 reviews37 followers
January 7, 2023
Droga przez mękę, za dużo oniryzmu i mało do siebie pasujących wątków
Profile Image for Raf.
96 reviews4 followers
Read
March 10, 2018
Oniryczna proza poetycka. Takiego Konwickiego nie znałem.
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