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Jerzy Pilch (1952–2020)

Author of The Mighty Angel

30+ Works 411 Members 14 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

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Works by Jerzy Pilch

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Canonical name
Pilch, Jerzy
Birthdate
1952
Date of death
2020-05-29
Gender
male
Nationality
Poland
Birthplace
Wisła , Schlesien, Polen
Place of death
Kielce, Heiligkreuz, Polen
Places of residence
Warschau, Polen
Wisła, Polen
Krakau, Polen
Occupations
Schriftsteller

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Reviews

Episodic, fictionalised memoir of alcoholism (or "alcohology" as it's referred to at one point), at first frustratingly disconnected and annoyingly self-aware (one early chapter is simply a grab bag of quotes from a hit parade of rummy writers), but which gradually coheres as (maybe) a path to, or glimpse of, sobriety comes into view. Like many an alcoholic, the author knows himself both too well and not at all, and this is reflected in the elegant self-flagellations of his prose style. It must have been tricky to translate, but Bill Johnston's English version reads flawlessly.

I bought this book by mistake. I got it in my mind that it was the source story for Wojciech Has's 1950 masterpiece of alcoholic cinema The Noose, and only when it arrived at my door did I notice it was published 50 years later than that film. But I'm glad I read it. The best bit is the haunting, lyrical digression into the narrator's grandfather's story of frostbitten vodka-tinctured self-destruction, but I also really like how the book ends, with an apparently genuine encomium to the transformative power of love. Not easy to pull off.
… (more)
½
 
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yarb | 7 other reviews | Aug 2, 2023 |
Normally, reading about alcoholism is about as interesting as watching other people getting drunk, so I wasn't really in a rush to read this book. However, when I finally got around to it, I found that Pilch does a pretty good job of explaining the appeal of alcohol. His narrator may be detached and satirical enough to demand our attention, but at th same time he's implicated so deeply in his alcoholic persona that we can follow him some way along the road. I wasn't quite at the point of searching the bathroom cabinet for untapped bottles of after-shave as I read it, but I had the feeling that I could begin to see why someone might want to do that. Pilch shows us a sort of Catch-22 of drinking: you have to be mad to destroy your life with alcohol, but with the world in its current state you would have to be mad not to...… (more)
 
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thorold | 7 other reviews | Dec 10, 2013 |
This is a strange and compelling book which I consumed avidly on the tube, but it's going to be hard to describe it without making it sound tedious. It's mostly about an alcoholic drinking. But it is more interesting than that sounds.
½
 
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annesadleir | 7 other reviews | Feb 15, 2012 |
LibraryThing Review: i think Jerzy Pilch is a phenomenal writer! In "The Mighty Angel" Pilch bombards the reader with the experience of being a regular on an "alco" ward in a rehab facility. Question.....Are the characters, like Don Juan the Rib, the Queen of Kent, and the Hero of Socialist Labor, representations of aspects of the narrator, or individuals? The narrator's perspective on alcoholism, alcoholics & alcohol is gritty, tough, and incredibly insightful. Is it just a coincidence that the narrator is named Jerzy, is a writer, and has been to rehab eighteen times? Just read this masterpiece and see how the narrator fares. This is my second Pilch novel and they were both five star reads!… (more)
1 vote
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hemlokgang | 7 other reviews | Nov 10, 2011 |

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Statistics

Works
30
Also by
1
Members
411
Popularity
#59,241
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
14
ISBNs
75
Languages
9
Favorited
2

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