Conversations with Stanisław Lem | |
Title Orig: | Rozmowy ze Stanisławem Lemem |
Author: | Stanisław Bereś |
Country: | Poland |
Language: | Polish |
Genre: | Interview |
Media Type: | Print (paperback) |
Pages: | 399 |
Isbn: | 8308016561 |
Oclc: | 572265632 |
Published: | 1987 |
Publisher: | Wydawnictwo Literackie |
Thus spoke... Lem | |
Title Orig: | Tako rzecze… Lem |
Author: | Stanisław Bereś |
Country: | Poland |
Language: | Polish |
Genre: | Interview |
Media Type: | Print (paperback) |
Pages: | 575 |
Isbn: | 8308032451 |
Oclc: | 749598762 |
Published: | 2002 |
Publisher: | Wydawnictwo Literackie |
Rozmowy ze Stanisławem Lemem (literal translation: Conversations with Stanisław Lem) is a book-length interview of Polish science fiction writer Stanisław Lem conducted by literary critic and historian Stanisław Bereś in 1981–1982 and published in book format in 1987. The second, more comprehensive edition was published in 2002 under the title Tako rzecze... Lem (Thus Spoke... Lem).[1] The German-language, uncensored version, Also sprach Lem, was published earlier, in 1986.[2] [3]
The interview lasted a year, from November 1981 to August 1982, and was interrupted by the beginning of martial law in Poland. The book's publication was delayed as both Lem and Bereś were seen as involved with the opposition and sympathetic towards Western powers. Parts of the interview were first published in West Germany and Poland in the monthly literary magazine Odra.
The book was published in 1986 in Germany by Insel Verlag under the title Lem über Lem. Gespräche ("Lem about Lem. Conversations").[4] In 1987, the book was published by Polish publisher Wydawnictwo Literackie, but in a low-quality edition of 10,000 copies; furthermore, as the book was subject to significant government censorship, in particular, the parts were removed that discussed the Polish government's declaration of the martial law and the Soviet occupation of the city of Lwów, where Lem lived during his youth.[1]
The second, expanded edition included fragments censored from the previous edition as well as a new chapter based on more recent interviews with Lem carried out by Bereś after the September 11 attacks in the United States.[5] The title of the book was also changed to Tako rzecze… Lem (Thus spoke... Lem), an allusion to Thus Spoke Zarathustra and the title initially intended for the book.
Reviewing the second edition in 2002, Wojciech Orliński called it "the most interesting of all monographies about Lem" and a "brilliant interview".[6]
The book is composed of the following chapters:
While Bereś' interview was never fully translated to English, in the early 1990s Lem met with the literary scholar and critic Peter Swirski for a series of extensive interviews, published with other critical materials and translations in English as A Stanislaw Lem Reader (1997).[7]
In 2005 Bereś published another book-length interview, Historia i fantastyka, this time with Polish fantasy writer Andrzej Sapkowski.[8] Wojciech Orliński in his review of Historia i fantastyka notes that comparing it with the Lem's interview from 1980s it allows for a study of how Polish science fiction and fantasy has changed over those two decades.