Mikoaj Grynberg
is a photographer, author, and trained psychologist. He is the author ofSurvivors of the 20th Century,I Accuse Auschwitz, andThe Book of Exodusas well asI'd Like to Say Sorry, but There's No One to Say Sorry ToandConfidential(The New Press).I'd Like to Say Sorry, but There's No One to Say Sorry To, his first work of fiction, was a finalist for the Nike, Poland's top literary prize. He lives in Poland.
Praise for I’d Like to Say Sorry, but There’s No One to Say
Sorry To:
"Sean Gasper Bye’s crisp phrasing renders in poignant English
Grynberg’s tales of missed connections and disconnection. Here,
whole lives seem to shift within pithy sentences—between sentences,
even. These brief stories mesmerize with vignettes and short sharp
phrases whose truth exceeds an all-too-neat binary of
fiction/nonfiction. With a photographer’s eye and a historian’s
gift for teasing out patterns, Grynberg tempts us into a
rapprochement with our own, troubled pasts, with the parts of our
pasts we most shudder to recall. To read these stories is to see
humanity at its worst and yet never to lose a conviction about what
we might long for."
—Jury of the 2023 National Translation Award
“Drop everything and get a copy of Mikołaj Grynberg’s collection of
short vignettes, I’d Like to Say Sorry, but There’s No One to Say
Sorry To.”
—Religious News Service
“Grynberg’s fiction debut is a sobering glimpse into a particularly
difficult kind of diaspora life. For Grynberg, the book is a way of
asserting belonging in a country that has tried to deny its Jewish
history and its complicity in Jewish persecution.”
—The Forward
“Grynberg’s writing is sharp, edged with a sarcastic wit and a
touch of black humour, yet underlined by an air of tragedy. . . .
I’d Like to Say I’m Sorry is not only insightful, but also an
important read.”
—Canadian Jewish News
“I’d Like to Say Sorry, but There’s No One to Say Sorry To revisits
the plight of the second and third post-Holocaust generations
without any documentary constraints. . . . These soliloquies of
doubt, grief, rage or sheer bewilderment appear without gloss or
commentary, as minimalist micro-dramas. . . . [Mikołaj Grynberg’s]
speakers span many stages of life and states of mind, flexibly
captured in the salty, speedy English prose of Sean Gasper
Bye.”
—The Wall Street Journal
“Wrenching, astonishing, surprisingly humorous. . . . Polish
photographer/psychologist Mikołaj Grynberg alchemizes his
documentary nonfiction into a superb collection of 31 short stories
poignantly revealing the Polish Jewish experience.”
—Shelf Awareness
“This is a real bomb of a book. . . . Written with an amazing eye
for detail, with crisp conciseness. . . . And everything here is
seasoned with a heavy sprinkling of spot-on black humour.”
—European Literature Network
“The vital English-language debut from Grynberg, a photographer,
psychologist, and oral historian, features thirty-one first-person
vignettes narrated by Jews and gentiles in Poland who belong to the
generation born after the Holocaust. . . . Grynberg knows the value
of capturing a moment in time; through these narratives, the reader
sees, as translator Bye notes, ‘something we might not have seen
with our own eye.’ These views of a tragic past are brought sharply
into focus.”
—Publishers Weekly
“A moving and often wryly funny portrait of Polish Jewishness. . .
. At times witty, at others devastating, Grynberg’s first foray
into fiction is a major triumph.”
—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Grynberg writes with a careful, almost stoic format. . . . His
style is both erudite and cautious. . . . Like cracking an egg
open, Grynberg peels away the outer, protective layers of ego,
leaving bare the pathos of bigotry and the relentless striving
toward understanding.”
—New York Journal of Books
“A poignant short story collection about being a Polish Jew.”
—Foreword Reviews
“Grynberg renders the specific and universal messiness of
individuals and families trying to connect, avoiding connection,
and longing to find some kind of peace in complexity.”
—Maia Ipp, contributing editor of Jewish Currents
“Mikołaj Grynberg’s characters yearn for connection, though the
relationships with their family, their people, and their country,
are fraught. One of the most brutal of Grynberg’s vignettes
describes the casual inherited anti-Semitism of children. But what
becomes of these children when their parents, late in life, reveal
that they are Jewish? How do they make sense of who they are and
where they belong in the world? An absolutely gripping, emotionally
exhausting book. Highly recommended.”
—Goldie Goldbloom, author of On Division
“The incredible vividness of these monologues, the realism, the
sadness and the black humor, all combine into an enthralling,
multi-faceted story of Jewish and Polish fate. . . . I’ll come back
to this book, and I’m sorry I can’t take any of these stories as
fiction. All of it is true. Unfortunately.”
—Wojciech Szot, Zdaniem Szota
“It is with a lump in my throat that I read these luminous cameos.
Such a range of voices, often revealing for the first time what had
been hidden for a lifetime. In Grynberg, psychologist and artist by
equal measure, they have found a vessel into which they can pour
their hearts. With exquisite clarity, his spare prose lays bare the
conundrums with which they have lived and died—as Jews in postwar
Poland.”
—Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Ronald S. Lauder Chief Curator of
the Core Exhibition at the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish
Jews
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