Jerzy Kosinski's harrowing narrative, The Painted Bird, earned accolades from critics, yet also stirred a great deal of controversy when it was published in the United States in 1965. The novel, based on Kosinski's own experiences in Poland during World War II, centers on a young, unnamed boy's struggle to survive during the war by hiding in several remote villages in an Eastern European country. His parents had sent him to live with a foster mother while they hid from the Nazis, but when the foster mother dies, the boy is forced to wander alone from village to village. Due to his dark eyes and complexion, the villagers suspect he is a Jew or a gypsy and so continually torment him.
Description of the book 'The Painted Bird': Originally published in 1965, 'The Painted bird' established Jerzy Kosinski as a major literary figure. Called by the Los Angeles Times 'one of the most imposing novels of the decade, ' it was eventuallly translated into more than thirty languages. Our partners will collect data and use cookies for ad personalization and measurement. Learn how we and our ad partner Google, collect and use data. Download The Painted Bird or read The Painted Bird online books in PDF, EPUB and Mobi Format. Click Download or Read Online button to get The Painted Bird book now. This site is like a library, Use search box in the widget to get ebook that you want.
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While some critics have found the novel's violence excessive, most applaud its realistic depiction of the horrors of World War II. Andrew Field in Book Week defends the novel, admitting:
So awful . . . is this book that I can scarcely 'recommend'
it to anyone, and yet, because there is enlightenment
to be gained from its flame-dark pages,
it deserves as wide a readership as possible.
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Kosinski suffered years of torment after the novel's publication. The book was banned in Poland, his homeland, and he and his family suffered continual verbal and physical attacks by Eastern Europeans who considered the book slanderous to their culture. The novel endures, however, because of its powerful statement on the nature of cruelty and survival. In the Afterward of the second edition of The Painted Bird, Kosinski notes the impetus for the novel and for much of his writing: when his parents described their experiences during the war and their witnessing of 'young children being herded into the trains,' he writes, 'it was therefore very much for their sakes and for people like them that I wanted to write fiction which would reflect, and perhaps exorcise the horrors that they had found so inexpressible.'