"History has no use for witnesses."
When Marek Hlasko sent this novel to publishers in Poland in the
mid-1950s, it was uniformly rejected. When he asked why, he was told:
"This Poland doesn't exist."
Long out of print, The Graveyard is Hlasko's portrait of a system
built on such denial and willful blindness. Factory worker Franciszek
Kowalski is on his way home one evening after drinking with an old
friend from the People's Army when he unthinkingly yells some insults at
a policeman. His outburst is taken as criticism of the government, and
he is arrested and then expelled from the Party.
Kowalski attempts to rehabilitate himself by gathering testimonies from
the men he had fought alongside, but each meeting with his former
comrades takes him further into the underworld that he realizes has been
there all along.
Written midway through Hlasko's meteoric career, The Graveyard set its
author and the Polish Communist government implacably against each
other, and it's easy to see why: Hlasko pulls no punches in portraying a
regime that is maintained by constant surveillance, intimidation, and
profound psychological manipulation.
A classic novel of political disillusionment from one of Poland's
seminal writers, an original "Angry Young Man" who lived fast, died
young, and wrote brilliantly.