The Junk Drawer

A junkie runs on junk time. When his junk is cut off, the clock runs down and stops. [William Burroughs, Junkie]

Lem Dies

Filed under: Newspaper Clippings — dhalgren at 11:09 pm on Monday, March 27, 2006

I’ve only read his THE FUTUROLOGICAL CONGRESS, but that was enough for me to recognize Lem as a fabulously inventive writer. The Tarkovsky film is quite good as well. But very long. I’ve yet to see the Soderbergh version.

Todd

Polish author Stanislaw Lem, most famous for science fiction works including Solaris, has died aged 84, after suffering from heart disease. He sold more than 27 million copies of his works, translated into about 40 languages, and a number were filmed. His 1961 novel Solaris was made into a movie by Russian director Andrei Tarkovsky in 1971 and again by American Steven Soderbergh in 2002.Soderbergh’s version starred George Clooney and Natascha McElhone.

Lem was born in 1921 in Lviv in Ukraine and studied medicine there before World War II. He moved to Krakow in 1946. He concentrated on science fiction writing, a genre regarded by the Polish socialist government as fairly harmless in terms of censorship. However, his first major novel, Hospital of the Transfiguration, went unpublished for eight years until the ideological thaw that followed Soviet leader Josef Stalin’s death in 1956. Other key works included The Cyberiad in 1965. After the collapse of communism in eastern Europe, Lem turned to writing reports on future trends, including computer crime and the ethical problems of the internet.

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