Michał Witkowski
Michał Witkowski (born 17 January 1975, in Wrocław, Poland) is a Polish novelist. Life and careerHis first "official" work, Copyright, published in 2001, was a collection of short stories. However, he had previously published, Zgorszeni wstają od stołów in 1997 as Michał S. Witkowski, with the S. standing for Sebastian.[1] On December 17, 2004, Lubiewo was published — a radically queer novel that sold an estimated 15,000 copies.[citation needed] The novel has been translated into German, English (Lovetown), Spanish, Dutch, Finnish (2007), French, Russian, Czech, Lithuanian, Ukrainian, Slovenian (2010) and Hungarian (2010). His next collection of stories Fototapeta (Photo-wallpaper) was published in 2006 by W.A.B. More recently, Witkowski has published two "queer crime novels", in which a gay writer named Michał Witkowski acts as first-person narrator and detective: Drwal (The Woodcutter, 2011) and Zbrodniarz i dziewczyna (The Criminal and the Girl, 2014). Witkowski was nominated three times for the Nike Award, Poland's best-known literary award: in 2006 for Lubiewo (shortlist), in 2007 for Barbara Radziwiłłówna z Jaworzna-Szczakowej (longlist), and in 2012 for Drwal (longlist). Lubiewo won the Gdynia Literary Prize in 2006, and Barbara Radziwiłłówna z Jaworzna-Szczakowej was awarded the Paszport Polityki in 2007. Lovetown, the English translation of Lubiewo was longlisted for the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize in 2011. He has been a contributor to Wprost since July 2014. Previously he had worked for six years for Polityka.[2] He is also author of a fashion blog, Fashion Pathology. Personal lifeHe describes himself as a homosexual.[3] He rejects the label "gay" as a personal identity[4] as referring to a subculture in the queer community, those commonly represented by popular culture.[5] Works
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