Synopses & Reviews
Sixty years after his murder by the Nazis, Bruno Schulz, one of the twentieth century's greatest and most enigmatic writers, is experiencing a renaissance in part occasioned by this biography by the renowned Polish poet Jerzy Ficowski. Widely regarded as the world's foremost authority on Schulz, Ficowski reconstructs the author's life story and evokes the fictional vision of his best-known works, and . Including many of Schulz's paintings and letters as well as new information on the Mossad's removal of Schulz's murals from Poland in 2001, this book will stand for years to come as the definitive account of the author's tragic life. Developed for publication by The Jewish Heritage Project's International Initiative for Literature of the Holocaust.
Review
"Bruno Schulz was one of the great writers....[His] verbal art strikes us--stuns, even--with its overload of beauty." John Updike
Review
"Without Ficowski there would be no Schulz, just as without Max Brod, there would be no Kafka." Jaroslaw Anders
Synopsis
"A prolonged labor of love [and] a model of a kind of penetrating adoration."--Richard Bernstein,
About the Author
Jerzy Ficowski, a poet, has studied Bruno Schulz's life since the 1940s.Theodosia Robertson is an associate professor of history at the University of Michigan.