“the difference between life and death depended upon . . . whether one went to visit a friend at one o’clock or twenty minutes later.”
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.
washington post | via
spreeblick
t>
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post.
| TrackBack URI