Marcin Szczygielski
Personal Information
Description
Marcin Szczygielski (born 1972), Polish writer, journalist and graphic designer. He is an author of theatrical plays, novels for adults and for teenagers. Since December 2012 he has been a member of Stowarzyszenie Pisarzy Polskich (Polish Writers' Association). His debut was PL-BOY (published 2003), a fictional, humorous account of the editorial department of the Polish Edition Playboy magazine that Szczygielski used to be the Art director of. The novels that followed – Wiosna PL-BOYa (2004), Nasturcje i cwoki (2005) and Farfocle namietnosci (2006) – established him as one of the most-read authors of popular literature in Poland. Berek (2007) tells a story of a difficult friendship between an elderly lady - a conservative Catholic and her young neighbour, openly gay. The novel immediately hit the bestseller list. Its spinoff, titled Bierki, was published in 2010. In 2011 Poczet Krolowych Polskich (The Queens Saga) was published, which is claimed to be the most mature and most ambitious novel of Szczygielski. This elaborate, multigenerational family saga that portrays the contemporary Polish history through the lives of women of 4 generations, was nominated for the Srebrny Kałamarz Literary Prize. A separate part of Marcin Szczygielski's literary output are books aimed towards younger readers. Each of them has received numerous awards and recognition awards in literary contests, whereas novels Czarny Mlyn and Za niebieskimi drzwiami have been incorporated into the extracurricular reading list in Polish elementary schools. Szczygielski's theatrical plays have been staged in many Polish theatres – among others in the cities Warsaw, Łódź, Płock and Cracow.[Wikipedia]
Books
Flügel aus Papier
Story of nine-year old Jewish boy Rafał who is escaping from Warsaw Ghetto with other Jewish children and is hiding in abandoned Warsaw ZOO.
Poczet Królowych Polskich (The Queens Saga)
In Marcin Szczygielski's novel "The Queens Saga" the dynamics of gender intertwines with the dynamics of history. The author tells a story of generation change, of the transformation of social practices and the sexual revolution - all these against the background of the 20th century events. "The Queens Saga" is at the same time a sensation novel, a novel of manners and a historical one, in which two first- person narrations are interlaced, providing the reader with insight into the beginning and end of the century. It is not, however, another story of Polish fate, not even a herstory - Szczygielski combines the above-mentioned motifs in a very subversive way. Every time he prioritises the private over the public, the inoficcial, emotional and intimate over the official, decent and proper. The protagonists are three women from the Queen family - a grandmother (actress), a mother (city tour guide) and a daughter (working in the marketing and advertising business). Each of them has a very strong personality, they are all in conflict with the rest of the world, independent and detached from the family. Szczygielski constructs his whole novel out of contradictions and this is also how he creates his heroines - they are powerful women, bereaved and always lonely, facing the world on their own. The threads of this sensational history are revealed gradually, showing the heroines fighting the adversities of ironic fate. Magda has been in love with her homosexual friend for all her life, her mather - a fervent communist - has to bear with millions of zlotys on her bank account, and finally the grandma hides her Jewish identity and starts an entangled relationship with a Nazi. "The Queens Saga" is an ambiguous title - it refers to the women that rule their era and are in fact its quintessence. Grandmother is the screen queen, her daughter literally leads Socialist marches, and her granddaughter, with her affinity towards fashion and life in the big city, embodies the modern female lifestyle. The title can also be seen as an allusion to drag queen - the symbol of sexual minorities. In "The Queens Saga" femininity is a symbol on its own. In the world of this novel there are weak men and powerful women. This reversal of proportions makes it possible to present many areas usually not mentioned in the narratives about the past. The author constructs a story about what we don't know well and leads it away from the conventional tracks. Namely, he portrays a Jewish home in which a gentile girl is a servant, a Jewish craftsman who becomes father to two daughters - one Christian and one Jewish, and finally a relationship between a Polish actress and a German soldier. In this story the pre-war Polish officers are not heroes of the war for independence but brutal rapists who end their life in Katyn. Alongside these threads Szczygielski introduces homosexual and gender motifs, creating "trap" figures - that is young men dressing like women in the interwar period. As a result he is the first Polish author to portray Polish LGBT community of the 1930s. "The Queens Saga" is worth reading not only because it's skilfully plotted and its surprising intrigue shows the other side of history and rewrites a certain fragment of the national narrative. The reading is also pure pleasure. Szczygielski masters the words perfectly, uses a witty, ironic language and faultlessly portrays multi-dimensional heroines that it is just impossible to be indifferent to. Paulina Małochleb. Książki Magazine
Berek
Hilarious and touching at the same time story about difficult friendship between an elderly lady - a conservative Catholic and her young neighbour, openly gay.
Arka Czasu
Story of nine-year old Jewish boy Rafał who is escaping from Warsaw Ghetto with other Jewish children and is hiding in abandoned Warsaw ZOO. • Grand Prix in the 3rd Astrid Lindgren Literary Contest for children's and teenager's books, 2013 • 1st Prize in the 3rd Astrid Lindgren Literary Contest, category: novels for children aged 10–14, 2013 • recognition award in the Book of the Year 2013 Literary Contest organized by the Polish section of IBBY, 2013 • 1st Prize in Halina Skrobiszewska Children Literature Contest and incorporation into the Polish Museum of Children's Books Treasure List, 2014
Omega
One day, the life of twelve-year-old Omega changes into a computer game. The key to winning each successive level is to perform tasks and orders sent by text message. Performing a task wrongly means losing your life. The backdrop for Omega’s adventures is Warsaw, but distorted by the author’s imagination. By playing with some classic literary and cultural motifs, such as the recently fashionable zombie, some bureaucratic time thieves inspired by Michael Ende’s Momo, and the sort of diagnoses elaborated by Jungian psychoanalysis, Szczygielski takes up an intelligent, postmodern dialogue with the reader. The clear, stage-by-stage structure of the game set within the refined and unconventional reality of an alternative Warsaw, and also the interesting narrative experiment, place Omega on a par with the novels of fantasy writers such as Neil Gaiman and China Melville. Just like them, Szczygielski moves away from the set formulae to create an original world full of verve and energy. As a novel about growing up, Omega could be said to belong to the “Bildungsroman” genre. Each level of the game represents the next stage in the development of the heroine’s personality. What will the final outcome be for her? A victorious step into conscious maturity, or a catastrophe that means losing her identity? • Recognition award in Halina Skrobiszewska Children Literature Contest and incorporation into the Polish Museum of Children's Books Treasure List, 2010 • Recognition award in the Most Beautiful Books of the Year 2009 Contest organized by the Polish Association of Book Publishers • Book of the Year 2010 in the contest organized by the Polish section of IBBY - International Board on Books for Young People, 2011
Kallas
Theatrical play about friendship between two great polish divas – Kalina Jędrusik and Wioletta Villas.
