Farewells to Plasma

Front Cover
Twisted Spoon Press, 2001 - Fiction - 141 pages
Few Polish prose writers of the past ten years have attracted as much delight and bewilderment as Natasza Goerke. Her stories, which are commonly fastened with predicates like "surreal," "grotesque," "ludicrous," "ironic," and "extravagant," call to mind the absurdist and parabolic work of Daniil Kharms, Slawomir Mrozek, Clarice Lispector, and Antonio Tabucchi. Although her reluctance toward straightforward narration, her refusal of any "responsibility" on the part of the writer to provide metaphysical product for the national masses, and her involvement with esoteric perspectives such as Buddhism and Asian cultures generally, all have caused less avant-garde-friendly critics to shake their heads in consternation, her erudition and extremely fine feeling for the Polish language have earned her recognition from all quarters as one of the most innovative and important voices of the younger generation.

(from the Translator's Note)


Farewells to Plasma is a selection of short stories and prose from the three volumes Goerke has published in Polish.

From inside the book

Contents

Waiting Underground Transitions
11
A Plot
25
Siberian Palms
38
Copyright

7 other sections not shown

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About the author (2001)

Natasza Goerke is a representative of the bruLion generation in Polish literature, one of the freshest talents to emerge in recent years. She was born in Pozan, Poland, in 1960, and studied Polish and Oriental languages at university. She has published three books in Polish and one collection in German translation. Her stories have appeared in numerous Polish magazines and in Slovenian, Macedonian, Serbian, German and English anthologies (The Eagle and the Crow, Serpent's Tail--UK, 1996). In 1993 she received the Czas Kultury Prize; in 1995 she won a six-month stipend to the prestigious Akademie Schloss Solitude in Stuttgart, the only Polish writer to receive this distinction. She currently lives in Hamburg, Germany.

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