Ok this day today new tradition born - monday evening poland!

ok this day today new tradition born - monday evening poland!

every monday evening poland you love poland in thread

I love poland

I loved Sienkiewicz when I was a boy.
Then I loved Lem as a teenager, even if I probably didn't really get his ideas.
Now I'm trying to get into Gombrowski, but he's so difficult and cheeky (and gay).

Poland is for fags lol

I love Poland

try Lysiak maybe youll like him
im big Lem fan myself, only equal to his level would be P.K.Dick

I love Poland, and I hope Poland loves me too.

Thanks, but I feel I'm too old for historical novels now. I mean, if I ever want to read any of those, I'll sooner turn to War & Peace. How about /lit/ meme author Bruno Schulz, is he widely read in Poland? I once watched an adaptation of Sanatorium pod Klepsidra, which was pretty trippy.

I really really like that picture.

I love when i cum in your mom's ass, sure bitch has some flopy tits but i lik to squeeze heh

t. your mom's new boyfriend

Bruno Schulz is widely read at schools as a mandatory lecture

consequently, no Pole enjoys him

yes everyone know Shulz, you should vheck out "Street of Crocodiles" by Quay Brothers too
if you like history kaybe try Grzesiuk and his triptic autobiography. i like the one when he was telling stories how yo survive in concentration camp. also Tolstoy is obviously superior, but we were talking about polish writers
what abput slovenian ones?

I always wanted to know, is Poland a girl, or a boy?

its her

Lads, let me tell you about Poland. Poland is many things, but not 'cool'. Poland is your blood and bones, in fact wherever a Pole is there is Poland. That's how Poles refer to each other - as their own blood and bones.

Poland is the constant longing. Not longing for success, or for freedom, or for power. Poland is the constant longing for longing's sake, and that is because of a typical Pole's void where his soul used to be. Polish souls died long ago and we're all living in a purgatory.

You may muse why Poles do not show happiness casually. Why would they? Happiness is private. Happiness is the only thing still belonging to you, not to your ancestors. They always demand your blood, your sacrifice, your work for your Fatherland's magnificence but never ask you to be happy. Happiness is yours only. If a Pole decides to share his inner happiness with you then, by God, you are his. Forever. You are Poland henceforth.

Poles rarely show enthusiasm or any higher feelings at all. They are sociopaths by western standards, but by their own standards they are just seeking their own completion and do not want feeling to interfere. The bane of Pole's existence is the precise knowledge that completion will never come.

To be a Pole is to be constantly introverted. To observe, analyse and come up with possible solutions. If they do not appear anyway, Pole shan't despair. Shan't show anger. These are just surface feelings. Inside Pole will have expected failure. Such is life.

You may probably have seen Poles drunk. Well, they drink a lot. They even appear human then. It's a ruse. They drink to forget about their existence for at least a while.

Don't cry over Poles, because they will not be grateful. They are walking husks drained of humanity, animated avatars of their national virtues and vices. It is not accidental that the most common motto of Polish people goes: "God, Honour, Fatherland". There is no place for rest. You live a little while, then die.

Slovenian literature has always been strongly geared towards poetry.

There are a handful of authors I respect, and most all of them tended towards the short story format. Ivan Cankar is the king of Slovenian novelists, of course. He was sort of like a Slovenian Knut Hamsun, an angsty symbolist, only socialist in outlook rather than fascist. You can find his best works, Idealist (Martin Kačur in the original) and Na Klancu, condensed into cinema in the movies shot in the 70s by Vojko Duletić.

Vladimir Bartol's historical novel Alamut is a well-known treatment of the Hashashin, but it's rather prosaic.

Lojze Kovačič was hyped as an existentialist Slovenian Proust in the 60s, and even though such praise was not quite deserved, he probably remains the most acute observer of Slovenian live in the first half of the 20th century.

Drago Jančar is the bestselling and highly awarded Slovenian novelist of today, and his novels offer an accessible form of modernism coupled with a conservative but informed take on Slovenian history from the reformation onwards.

Hope this helps you find sth.

Here, have some rare Poland painting, as you can see she's a qt.

thanks! i copied your post to do my homework later
honestly pard my ignorance but only slovenian i knew was Slavoj Zizek..

This pasta is beautiful, I will frame it and pass it down to my children.
I wish I were polish :(

good thread needs bump

Learn English m9

Gombrowski is top tier lad

>Gombrowski
lmao he fooled me
Gombrowicz of course

it's "Ojczyzna" - Fatherland, you fucking cucks