Amazon.com Review
Published originally in 1976,
The Shadow Catcher is the fourth of Polish writer Andrzej Szczypiorski's novels to appear in English. The protagonist is 15-year-old Krzys, a sensitive boy who, in the summer of 1939, goes on holiday to the country. Rumors of war waft on the periphery, but no one takes them seriously. Over the course of just a few days, young Krzys falls in love, explores the nature of identity, faith and passion, and meditates on the position of the large Jewish population in Poland--a community the boy considers an integral part of his nation. The novel ends before war is declared, but readers know the eventual fates of both Poland and its Jews during the Nazi occupation.
The Shadow Catcher is not so much a historical novel as a remembrance of a world about to disappear forever and the unsuspecting souls who peopled it.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Krzys is 15 and awakening to consciousness. Unfortunately, he chose a bad time and place: Poland, 1939, on a summer visit to the country home of his father's friend, Pilecki. There, he meets Pilecki's attractive niece and old aunts and learns of love, death, and religion. He is taken hunting and reads Madame Bovary; Bovary is more to his liking. He discovers his separateness, which makes him feel lonely but also awakens him to the world's beauty and mystery. Conflict arises mostly when he struggles internally or transgresses societal manners; otherwise, the book works more through suggestive detail and parallel situations. Szczypiorski does a lot with a little, making one action or thought resonate with another to vividly detail his characters and animate his story. His provocative musing, whether in a character's mind, dialogue, or situation, provides plenty of food for thought. Szczypiorski fought in the Polish resistance and knows well the subtleties and vagaries of Polish beliefs and lives at that fateful time in history.
Kevin Grandfield
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.