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         Lem Stanislaw:     more books (100)
  1. Star Diaries: Further Reminiscences Of Ijon Tichy by Stanislaw Lem, 1985-06-26
  2. The Invincible (Ace Science Fiction Special 4) by Stanislaw Lem, 1973
  3. A Stanislaw Lem Reader (Rethinking Theory) by Peter Swirski, 1997-11-12
  4. Solaris by Lem Stanislaw,
  5. Solaris (french) by Stanislaw Lem, 2002-08
  6. The Chain of Chance by Stanislaw Lem, 1978-01-01
  7. The Art and Science of Stanislaw Lem
  8. Mortal Engines by Stanislaw Lem, 1992-05-15
  9. Microworlds by Stanislaw Lem, 1986-11-24
  10. Return From The Stars (Helen and Kurt Wolff Books) by Stanislaw Lem, 1989-06-01
  11. Imaginary Magnitude by Stanislaw Lem, 1984-07
  12. Memoirs of a Space Traveler: Further Reminiscences of Ijon Tichy by Stanislaw Lem, 2000-02-11
  13. Hospital Of The Transfiguration by Stanislaw Lem, 1991-04-30
  14. More Tales Of Pirx The Pilot (Harvest Book) by Stanislaw Lem, 1983-09-26

21. Lviv Best Portal - Lviv Ukraine Lvov Lwow Lwiw
The fans of science fiction know stanislaw lem as one of the best scifi authors. One of the world s most widely read science fiction writers.
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22. Stanislaw Lem: 1921-2006 | MetaFilter
stanislaw lem 19212006. Polish science-fiction giant stanislaw lem died this morning. He was 84. Though lem was not as well known as Asimov or Heinlein or
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Stanislaw Lem: 1921-2006
March 27, 2006 8:54 AM Subscribe
Stanislaw Lem: 1921-2006. Polish science-fiction giant Stanislaw Lem died this morning. He was 84. Though Lem was not as well known as Asimov or Heinlein or the other "Masters", he was just as important to the genre. Lem was not a fan of traditonal science-fiction , and in his work tried to approach futuristic themes from a more humanistic, almost psychological, perspective. (And his books are funny !) His best-known work, Solaris , was twice made into a film, most recently in 2002 Woefully out-of-date official site
posted by jdroth (87 comments total)
Jesus, it feels like the bad news just keeps coming recently. posted by OmieWise at 8:55 AM on March 27 one of my all time favorites posted by puddles at 8:55 AM on March 27 Truly one of the greats. Little can compare to Cyberiad posted by NucleophilicAttack at 8:57 AM on March 27 posted by Squid Voltaire at 8:57 AM on March 27 I'm not a huge SF fan, but I really like Lem. His books and short stories have an originality and uniqueness unlike any other author.

23. A Stanislaw Lem Reader (Peter Swirski, Stanislaw Lem)
Peter Swirski s stanislaw lem Reader contains four pieces an introduction by Swirski to lem; an interview from 1992, in which lem reflects on philosophy,
http://dannyreviews.com/h/Lem_Reader.html
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A Stanislaw Lem Reader
Peter Swirski + Stanislaw Lem
Northwestern University Press 1997 A book review by Danny Yee Peter Swirski's Stanislaw Lem Reader contains four pieces: an introduction by Swirski to Lem; an interview from 1992, in which Lem reflects on philosophy, literature, and science; Lem's essay "Thirty Years Later", looking back at his predictions about virtual reality in his 1964 book Summa technologiae ; and a written interview from 1994, in which Lem answers, with what are almost mini-essays, questions about science, the future of science, and its relationship with the humanities and philosophy. A English language bibliography of Lem's books and articles and of critical studies thereon completes the volume. The focus throughout is on Lem as a philosopher and futurologist: there is little discussion of his works of fiction, as Lem prefers to leave that to the critics. For those who only know him as a novelist, A Stanislaw Lem Reader is an excellent introduction to Lem's philosophy, scientific speculation, literary criticism, and social theory. It should, however, be perfectly accessible to those unfamiliar with any of his works. The only disappointing thing about the volume is that it is too short: a biographical sketch would have made a good addition, and it would be good to see more of Lem's articles and essays translated into English.

24. Wired 10.12: Solaris, Rediscovered
stanislaw lem has never been beloved by the science fiction establishment. Philip K. Dick accused him of being a communist agent.
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/10.12/solaris.html
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Solaris, Rediscovered
SOLARIS 2.0
By Gary Wolf STANISLAW LEM MADE HARD SCIENCE AND DEEP PHILOSOPHY INTO SOME OF THE GREATEST SCIENCE FICTION YOU'VE NEVER SEEN. NOW HIS CLASSIC SOLARIS IS GETTING THE HOLLYWOOD TREATMENT. Stanislaw Lem has never been beloved by the science fiction establishment. Philip K. Dick accused him of being a communist agent. Members of the Science Fiction Writers Association booted him from their group. And no wonder: Lem has denounced popular sci-fi as trivial pulp produced by mental weaklings. Science fiction, he once wrote, "is a whore," prostituting itself "with discomfort, disgust, and contrary to its dreams and hopes." But strained relations with his peers hasn't tarnished Lem's career. The author of dozens of books translated into 40 languages, he is considered among the greatest sci-fi writers of all time. So why is it that Isaac Asimov and Arthur C. Clarke are household names, but Stanislaw Lem remains unknown to so many Americans? Start with the obvious: Lem writes in Polish. His most important books have never appeared in English. Even his best-known novel, Solaris , is available in US bookstores only as an English translation of a French abridgement of the Polish original. Yet the main reason Lem's never become established here is that his wit has always been too cruel, his love of science too prominent, his outlook too cerebral to fit easily into a publishing niche devoted to fairy-tale adventures and timeworn astronaut yarns.

25. DNA - World - Solaris Author Stanislaw Lem Dead - Daily News & Analysis
stanislaw lem, the science fiction author who wrote Solaris, has died.
http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1020403

26. Stanislaw Lem Quotes - The Quotations Page
stanislaw lem (1921 2006) Polish science fiction author more author details stanislaw lem, Holiday , 1963; Do not trust people.
http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Stanislaw_Lem/
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Stanislaw Lem (1921 - 2006)
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Faith is, at one and the same time, absolutely necessary and altogether impossible.
Stanislaw Lem - More quotations on: [ Faith
Cannibals prefer those who have no spines.
Stanislaw Lem "Holiday", 1963
Do not trust people. They are capable of greatness.
Stanislaw Lem "Holiday", September 1963
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27. Stanislaw Lem, The Futurological Congress And The Future Of Illusion
stanislaw lem foresaw the coming of the age of simulation in which humanity would lose itself in a world of illusions.
http://www.transparencynow.com/introlem2.htm
Stanislaw Lem and
The Future of Illusion In 1971, the author Stanlislaw Lem published a short novel titled The Futurological Congress in which he offered an intriguing diagnosis for what has gone wrong with contemporary society. In the novel, the main character, Ijon Tichy, wakes up from suspended animation in the future and finds that people now routinely partake of "psycho-chemical" drugs that can induce realistic hallucinations or waking dreams. Instead of merely watching television, they live out the fantasies of television as if it is happening to them. Not surprisingly, Tichy discovers that this world of artificial experience has generated more than its share of problems. Many people, for example, have become permanently lost to reality, preferring to spend their lives in a realm of alluring fictions. And it seems that everyone indulges fantasies of profound and unmitigated evil, popping pills so they can hallucinate the act of torture, sexual assault and murder. The novel follows Tichy's experiences as he slowly acclimates himself to this strange new existence. We see his bewilderment, his doubts, and his growing panic as he comes to the realization that he is trapped in a world in which the worst in humanity has been brought out by the power to simulate the look and feel of reality.

28. Stanislaw Lem:  The Futurological Congress
Review of The Futurological Congress by Steven H Silver.
http://www.sfsite.com/~silverag/lem.html
THE FUTUROLOGICAL
CONGRESS
by Stanislaw Lem
Translated by Michael Kandel
Cover by John Alfred Dorn III Reviewed by Steven H Silver Stanislaw Lem, Poland's premier science fiction author, writes science fiction in much the same way Kurt Vonnegut writes science fiction. He uses many of the tropes and buzz words of science fiction in a way which makes little internal sense in order to satirize contemporary society. Moreover, Much of Lem's writings, particularly his tales of Pirx the Pilot and Ijon Tichy, blend his satire with theater of the absurd. This strange, but functional, mixture can easily be seen in Lem's 1974 novel, The Futurological Congress , which follows Ijon Tichy on another of his myriad implausible adventures. Tichy was introduced in 1971 in Dzienniki Gwiazdowe The Star Diaries ), which chronicled twelve of Tichy's odd voyages. In the same year, Lem published Kongres futurologiczny The Futurological Congress ), which detailed Tichy's journey to a meeting of futurists in Costa Rica. When a coup breaks out, Tichy finds himself drugged, shot, frozen, and awoken in the year 2039. Although the indiginous inhabitants view their society as practically utopic, Tichy views the world as anything but. Lem's New York of 2039 is built on the remains of the American capitalist system, something which strikes fear into the hearts of good socialists, as Tichy's character is. More interesting is the role drugs play in the twenty-first century. Writing at a time when chemical research was giving the world LSD, Valium and similar widespread medications, Lem posits a future in which people can change their outlooks, personalities, etc. or get their educations via drug ingestion. In many ways, the reliance of drugs in

29. Benjamen Walker's Theory Of Everything: 04.05.06 Stanislaw Lem
This week on TOE (sorry its late server issues) me and my friend Bill Marx mourn the death of the Polish writer stanislaw lem. lem should have gotten the
http://www.toeradio.org/archives/2006/04/040506_stanisla.html
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04.05.06 Stanislaw Lem
This week on TOE (sorry its late - server issues) me and my friend Bill Marx mourn the death of the Polish writer Stanislaw Lem . Lem should have gotten the nobel prize for literature years ago.. both Bill and I are tempted to go down to Stockholm and straighten folks out..Bill Marx runs the WBUR arts page - he also does an Arts podcast Some of my favorite Lem books are The Futurological Congress , the Pirx books , and Fiasco (Lem's final novel). LISTEN Posted by bw at April 5, 2006 10:32 AM

30. Stanislaw Lem - Obituaries, News - Independent.co.uk
stanislaw lem, writer born Lwow, Poland 12 September 1921; married 1953 Barbara Lesniak (one son); died Krakow, Poland 27 March 2006.
http://news.independent.co.uk/people/obituaries/article354764.ece
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      • UK Friday, 31 March 2006 Stanislaw Lem, writer: born Lwow, Poland 12 September 1921; married 1953 Barbara Lesniak (one son); died Krakow, Poland 27 March 2006. Along with Czeslaw Milosz, Stanislaw Lem was for 50 years Poland's premier intellectual of the imagination. Writing in a language not easily accessible to other Europeans, and restricted in his travel by inclination and political barriers, he became all the same world-famous as the most daring and demanding of those authors of speculative fiction - like the Strugatski Brothers in the Soviet Union, and Josef Nesvadba in Czechoslovakia - who managed to flourish behind the Iron Curtain during the years of plague, 1946-90. His novels and stories - though not many of his non-fiction works - were translated into 35 languages or more, selling at least 27 million copies. In monoglot Britain and America, he was, after Jules Verne, the best-known and most influential science-fiction writer to be translated into English. His 1961 novel Solaris was filmed twice, first by Andrei Tarkovsky and most recently, in 2002, in a version starring George Clooney and directed by Steven Soderbergh.

31. Stanislaw Lem, Author Of Science Fiction Classics, Is Dead At 84 - New York Time
stanislaw lem contemplated man s place in the universe in sardonic and sometimes bleak terms in novels like Solaris and His Master s Voice.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/28/books/28lem.html
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32. The Cyberiad: Fables For The Cybernetic Age / Stanslaw Lem
This is the outline of “How the World Was Saved,” the first story in stanislaw lem s fabulous collection The Cyberiad Fables for the Cybernetic Age.
http://tal.forum2.org/cyberiad
The Cyberiad: Fables for the Cybernetic Age / Stanslaw Lem Reviewed by Tal Cohen Wednesday, 01 April 1998 Chances are, you've never met a gruncheon, nor have you ever seen a targalisk, a shupop, a calinatifact or a thists. In fact, I'm almost certain that you've never laid your eyes on a worch, or enjoyed the beauty of a true priton. You have no idea what you are missing!
But alas, all these are gone for good. The cause for this is a machine, created by Trurl the constructor. Oh, the machine is not to blame: it did only what was asked of it. It was a mighty machine that could create anything starting with n . At Trurl's request, it created noodles, nuclei, neutrons, noses, nymphs and other kinds of nonsense. But when Trurl's friend Klapaucius was offered a chance to test the machine, he did not care for such non-challenging nibbles. First, he asked the machine to create Nature, and the machine complied by filling Trurl's front yard with naturalists, arguing, publishing their works in many volumes, and tearing the works of others. Then Klapaucius, never satisfied, asked the machine to create Negative, which Trurl thought was tricky and unfair but the machine easily did by generating antiprotons, antielectrons, antineutrons, and other anti-particles in such a vast amount that a small anti-matter world was created before the constructors' eyes.
Still not satisfied, and aiming to prove that Trurl's machine really isn't worth that much, Klapaucius's next challenge was for the machine to create Nothing. At first, the two thought that indeed, the machine is doing nothing, which Trurl said was exactly what was asked of it, but Klapaucius countered by claiming that the machine was asked to do Nothing, but it isn't doing anything...

33. The Mumpsimus: Stanislaw Lem (1921-2006)
I wanted to buy a novel by stanislaw lem printed in the language of its inception, the template for what I had read in translation.
http://mumpsimus.blogspot.com/2006/04/stanislaw-lem-1921-2006.html
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Stanislaw Lem (1921-2006)
When Stanislaw Lem died last week, I wanted to note it, but didn't know quite what to say, as of Lem's novels I had only read Solaris , and that so long ago that my memory of it was vague. I thought about gathering up various obituaries, but other sites were doing a pretty good job of that, and I was too busy at the time to roam far and wide searching for more obscure obits. (I should note here, though, that one of the best appreciations I've seen is from Mr. Waggish
I quickly thought to ask Eric Schaller to write something about Lem, because visiting with Eric recently I'd seen a bunch of Lem books on his shelves. Eric graciously obliged. I do hope eventually to write something about Lem's essay collection Microworlds , a book that strongly influenced my view of SF when I first read it years ago, but I may not be able to do so for a little while.
For those of you who don't know him, Eric Schaller is an associate professor of biology at Dartmouth College , an illustrator perhaps best known for his work on Jeff VanderMeer's City of Saints and Madmen , and quite a fine writer himself.

34. Stanislaw Lem, 84; Polish Sci-Fi Author - Washingtonpost.com
stanislaw lem, 84, a Polishborn writer of reality based science fiction who tweaked Communist authorities and became one of the world s best-selling
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/27/AR2006032701571.
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Stanislaw Lem, 84; Polish Sci-Fi Author
By Adam Bernstein Washington Post Staff Writer Tuesday, March 28, 2006; Page B06 Stanislaw Lem, 84, a Polish-born writer of "reality based" science fiction who tweaked Communist authorities and became one of the world's best-selling authors with books such as "Solaris" and "The Futurological Congress," died March 27 at a hospital in Krakow, Poland. He had a heart ailment. Mr. Lem disliked having the phrase "science fiction" applied to his body of work, which included dozens of books, plays, collections of essays and a memoir. "I've always believed in science, but I write about the real world," he said. "So I write about what is happening, only in my own way, in my own terms."
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35. Seen: Stanislaw Lem RIP
stanislaw lem the Polish science fiction writer responsible for Solaris and The Cyberiad died on March 27th last week. lem was able to escape the draconian
http://studioseen.blogspot.com/2006/04/stanislaw-lem-rip.html
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Stanislaw Lem RIP
Stanislaw Lem the Polish science fiction writer responsible for Solaris and The Cyberiad died on March 27th last week. Lem was able to escape the draconian censorship which plagued wider literature in the then communust eastern europe because of writing in the seemingly innocuous field of science fiction, however many of his works contained subversive and satirical themes not to mention a highly complex sense of humour.
His most well known work Solaris describes the events of a crew observing a planet the surface of which is able to bring figures of the human unconscious to life. It was famously adapted for the screen by Russian director Andrei Tarkovsky in 1971, and again by Steven Soderbergh in 2002.
Other notable works include - A Perfect Vacuum, The Cyberiad, and His Masters Voice.
After the fall of communism in 1989, Lem ceased writing science fiction, instead devoting himself to nonfiction essays on computer crime, as well as technological and ethical problems posed by the expansion of the Internet.

36. Jeet Heer, "Stanislaw Lem"
LIKE MANY CREATORS OF science fiction, the Polish writer stanislaw lem is fascinated by what will happen when humanity makes its first contact with an
http://www.jeetheer.com/culture/lem.htm
Stanislaw Lem
By Jeet Heer
Boston Globe Ideas (December 15, 2004)
LIKE MANY CREATORS OF science fiction, the Polish writer Stanislaw Lem is fascinated by what will happen when humanity makes its "first contact" with an intelligent alien life form. In novels such as Solaris (1961) and His Master's Voice (1968), Lem suggests that the greatest problem will be communication: If we do meet genuinely otherworldly beings, how will we possibly talk to them?
Many sci-fi writers have tried to resolve this dilemma by imagining aliens simply as human beings with funny costumes or pointy ears. But Lem has tackled the problem with stories about creatures so strange that they baffle the understanding. In Lem's most famous novel, for example, scientists struggle for decades to communicate with an intelligent ocean that engulfs the planet Solaris. Repeated failure makes some of the scientists bitter and sullen, as if they'd been rejected by a haughty lover. Strangely, Lem's own relationship with his Western audience has long been marked by the same botched communication and wounded love.
Not that the 81-year-old writer, who lives in Krakow, would seem to have much to complain about. Lem's 40-odd books have been translated into 40 languages, and global sales figures top 25 million. The 1972 film adaptation of

37. Stanisław Lem - Wikipedia
Translate this page La capacità di conciliare e fondere filosofia e scienza, due generi per molti versi opposti, ha permesso a stanislaw lem di scrivere romanzi di grande
http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanisław_Lem
Stanisław Lem
Da Wikipedia, l'enciclopedia libera.
Vai a: Navigazione cerca Stanisław Lem Stanisław Lem Leopoli 12 dicembre Cracovia 27 marzo ) ¨ stato uno scrittore medico e filosofo polacco Lem ¨ probabilmente il pi¹ importante autore contemporaneo di fantascienza non angloamericana; le sue opere sono state tradotte in pi¹ di trenta lingue ed hanno venduto oltre trenta milioni di copie nel mondo. ˆ considerato uno dei maggiori scrittori polacchi. Uno dei suoi romanzi pi¹ celebri ¨ Solaris . Nel il regista sovietico Andrej Tarkovskij ne ha tratto un film omonimo di grande successo, che lo ha reso popolare al di fuori della sua patria.
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38. Stanislaw Lem - Research And Read Books, Journals, Articles At
lem, stanislaw stän swäf l m, 1921–, Polish science-fiction writer. A doctor by training, lem began his writing career as a poet before turning to the
http://www.questia.com/library/literature/stanislaw-lem.jsp

39. Stanislaw Lem
Among the anthologies, here are the ones worth looking at Tales of Pirx the Pilot; by stanislaw lem (AvonBard, $2.95). lem is the enigmatic contemporary
http://www.art.net/~hopkins/Don/lem/Lem.html
Stanislaw Lem
Author of The Cyberiad , starring Trurl and Klapaucius , which inspired the game SimCity A articulate Polish universal fiction writer, who thinks that Philip K Dick is a Visionary Among the Charlatans Nobody can figure out how he writes in Polish, yet the English translations of his books are full of brilliant poetic puns and neological phonetic jokes . He's got a great translator, Michael Kandel , to say the least. Date: 9 Aug 1981 0057-PDT
Subject: Budrys reviews SCIENCE FICTION column
By Algis Budrys
(c) 1981 Chicago Sun-Times (Field News Service) ... Among the anthologies, here are the ones worth looking at: Tales of Pirx the Pilot ; by Stanislaw Lem (AvonBard, $2.95). Lem is the enigmatic contemporary Pole whose agent claims he ranks with Verne. On the surface, these stories mostly recall back-page material in a 1940 American SF magazine. But Lem's novels, for all they sometimes seem more enigma than substance, do go deeper than that. So for students of SF as a world literature, this collection is obligatory. ... [See also " More Tales of Pirx the Pilot Date: 21 Jan 82 15:03-PDT
From: mclure@SRI-UNIX
Subject: Lem book review By JOHN LEONARD
c. 1982 N.Y. Times News Service

40. IPL Online Literary Criticism Collection
Use these links to search for stanislaw lem outside the IPL. Click a link below to automatically search that site for stanislaw lem
http://www.ipl.org/div/litcrit/bin/litcrit.out.pl?au=lem-727

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