Jerzy Kosinski Jerzy Kosinski was born in Poland in 1933 and ran away from revolutionary Russian parents. When he was invaded by the Nazis in 1939, he was separated from his family. For six years, he was crouching in the village, despised by the gypsies of Eastern Europe who are afraid of his eagle like the face and eyes. He survived German fear with his own wisdom, and he was foolish from the shock he experienced during the wandering six years. He was muted from 9 years old to 14 years old. (New Yorker) Kosinski later reunited with his family, and when he was 24 years he served as a professor at the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw.
44-year-old Jerzy Kosinski is sitting quietly in his Brown Palace suite. The awesome eyes that made Polish gypsies once angered and intimidated still shone in the room. Just like Kosinski, George Levant and Chasei Gardiner are ambiguous and paradoxical wise men. "It makes me feel pessimistic ... the fact that not many people notice is that their daily lives come to them like novels, they must imagine themselves They have to make a decision in life - whether the next male is a threat, is in love, is it betrayed by a lover, or whether you want to build a relationship Energy This is what I I think that the novels come from them - they are not preliminarily judged, they are not relatively prepacked, you have to invest themselves.
In the hotel suite room, Jerzy Kosinski, squatting in the village of Poland, was scribbling on his new novel title page. He drew an eagle-like face with a cock comb that hinted at his gorgeous hair. "This is just a coincidence," he said, "This is a painted bird" he wrote in a field full of blinking lines. "This is a picture bird with wings missing" Cherish is an ambiguous attitude.
In order to fully understand Jerzy Kosinsky's "Bird's picture" as a literary work, it is necessary to understand the events of the Holocaust. Getting used to the events experienced by European people during the war can explain why so many villagers take so crazy and unethical behavior. War is terrible, and in many cases people will encounter many terrible situations. Kosinski depicts its influence seriously graphically and emphasizes the influence of war on individuals. Sentences are often uncomfortable (violence, sadism, incest)