This collection of poems from one of Poland's major contemporary
writers, Grzegorz Wróblewski, demonstrates his characteristic virtues:
anthropological focus, objectivist detachment (though not without
hallucinatory interference), minimalistic precision. But it also signals
the presence of new elements. One of them is an extensive reliance on
found language, the preferred mode of Anglophone conceptual writers,
here acquiring a distinctly Eastern European flavor. Another is his
candor, which teases readers with glimpses of his most private feelings.
Bleak and terse, Wróblewski subjects his material to almost clinical
treatment in order to better dissect and so understand the series of
events that we call reality.