2011 Vol. 3 No. 4 — Winter / Commentary
…there’s a symmetry between the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and the French-English multicultural country I’ve grown up in… and it seems fitting that Polish and Canadian troops often fought side by side in WWII. That’s a good place to start rebuilding a sense of who I am, says Andrew Borkowski.
2011 Vol. 3 No. 4 — Winter / Books
Award-winning author Eva Stachniak’s dazzles with a tale of intrigue, ambition, spying, treachery, flattery, conflict and fear in St. Peterburg’s Winter Palace.
2011 Vol. 3 No. 4 — Winter / Books
Helena Modjeska, a great 19th century Polish actress who came to the US at age 30, learned enough English in six months to play Ophelia, except for the mad scene which was too difficult. So she played that in Polish and wowed them. Aren’t all madwomen incoherent anyway? Margaret Araneo reviews Beth Holmgren’s great book about the very talented, and very independent, Madame Modjeska.
2011 Vol. 3 No. 4 — Winter / Books
Powerful, peaceful and quintessentially Polish: Solidarity. Canadian author Heather Kirk spotlights the many facets of a world-changing revolution that killed “precisely no one.”
2011 Vol. 3 No. 4 — Winter / Features
A spellbinding performance by a master storyteller.
2011 Vol. 3 No. 4 — Winter / Poetry
Poetry by John Minczeski; introduced by John Guzlowski
2011 Vol. 3 No. 4 — Winter / Bulletin Board
by CR × on January 15, 2012 at 5:30 am ×
• Bogusław Schaeffer honored in chocolate
• Helena Modjeska in chocolate and elsewhere
• A new element named for Copernicus
• Radioactive, a biography of Marie and Pierre Curie, a National Book Award finalist
• Jan Lisiecki, pianist extraordinaire
• Wojtek the Soldier Bear is now a film
• Poland’s Prime Minister named European of the Year
2011 Vol. 3 No. 3 — Fall / Features
The largest single collection of Polish art is not in Poland, but in India. A special exhibit brings it home, at least for a visit, attracting thousands of visitors to a visual feast.
2011 Vol. 3 No. 3 — Fall / Films
Agnieszka Holland’s latest film is dedicated to Marek Edleman, the legendary leader of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and evokes passages of his book: “And there was love, too, in the ghetto…”
2011 Vol. 3 No. 3 — Fall / Commentary
The photo was unmistakably me, in Nehru shirt and bell bottoms, a cigarette dangling rakishly in my right hand… on the front page of Czechoslovakia’s Socialist Union of Youth newspaper.
2011 Vol. 3 No. 3 — Fall / Commentary
(*President Poland, of course.)
Isabelle Sokolnicka’s optimism may be contagious…
all the more reason to read on.
2011 Vol. 3 No. 3 — Fall / Films / Interviews
Chicago-based filmmaker Chris Swider discusses his award-winning documentary, and why he chose to focus on the youngest “enemies of the State.”
2011 Vol. 3 No. 3 — Fall / Books
Exquisitely graceful prose and a powerful story make Edward Herzbaum’s journals read like a novel, a timeless telling of the years 1939-1945.