Reviews'Utterly absorbing, absolutely first-rate Lem and first-rate Swirski.'<br />
Nicholas Ruddick
'Lem emerges from Peter Swirskiâs mastery of his subject in both the stunning breadth of his genius and a humanity forged by the nightmare of modern Polish history.'<br />
Ken Krabbenhoft, New York University
In those moments when Lem pauses and steps away from his career as author and critic, he reveals himself as a man continually haunted by the Holocaust, as an irascible elder aware of his foibles, and an imaginative philosophe. <br /><b><i>SFRA Review</i></b>
'An absolute delight ... Swirskiâs translation reads lucidly, and follows Lemâs own stylistic quirks ... the letters offer a needed glimpse into Lemâs own artistic self-presentation as he sought to negotiate how he was read outside of Poland.' <br />Bodhisattva Chattopadhyay, <i>Foundation: The International Review of Science Fiction</i>
'Utterly absorbing⌠absolutely first-rate Lem and first-rate Swirski.'<br />Nicholas Ruddick, author of <i>Fire in the Stone: Parehistoric Fiction from Charles Darwin to Jean M. Auel</i>
'Lem emerges from Peter Swirskiâs mastery of his subject in both the stunning breadth of his genius and a humanity forged by the nightmare of modern Polish history. Swirskiâs writing is graceful, engaging, and unmarred by jargon or pretense.' <br />Ken Krabbenhoft, New York University
'The worldâs leading Lem critic Peter Swirski competes with Lem in erudition and styleâand the winner is the reader.'<br />Bo Pettersson, University of Helsinki
'Short, dense, valuable.'<br /><i>SFRA</i>
'I recommend this volume highly to anyone wishing to follow the complex workings of a profound thinker's mind and to sample his ironic perspective on society, literature, politics, and the foreseeable future.'<br /><i>Slavic and East European Journal</i>