The interviews in this collection will convince the reader that Jerzy
Kosinski's public persona was one of the greatest creations. Few authors
were ever more adept at press interviews. For Kosinski, the author of
nine novels, including The Painted Bird, Steps, Being There, and The
Hermit of 69th Street, the interview was part performance, part public
relations, part blind date. Kosinski in person was different from the
existential adventurer in his novels. He was not so much engaged as
engaging. though his fiction was brutal, he was charming. The contrast
between Kosinski and the intensity of his fiction created the backdrop
for his interviews.
Like his readers, Kosinski's interviews were obsessed with the facts of
his life. As a young boy he survived the Holocaust. He escaped Communist
Poland. His life became the stuff of novels. He came to the United
States with little money and no command of the English, but within a
year he was a Ford Fellow at Columbia University and not long afterward
was married to an American heiress and was living on Park Avenue. Yet
Kosinski felt that his unique experiences, when transmuted to fiction,
became a didactic lesson for others. A human being is loaded with the
greatest power, he says in one interview, his imagination and the power
to transcend his own conditions.
The interviews here are published chronologically without abridgement.
The same questions recur and Kosinski's answers are filled with
discrepancies and contradictions. A good interview, he once wrote, is
like truth itself, the temporary resolution of various contradictions.
These compelling conversations recapture part of Jerzy Kposinski, who
took his own life on May 3, 1991.