Swimming in the Dark

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Pub Date 18 Feb 2021 | Archive Date 25 Feb 2021

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Description

'Marvellous, precise, poignant writing; the reader is happy to be overwhelmed. The highest talent at work' - SEBASTIAN BARRY

You were right when you said that people can't always give us what we want from them.

Poland, 1980. Anxious, disillusioned Ludwik Glowacki, soon to graduate university, has been sent along with the rest of his class to an agricultural camp. Here he meets Janusz - and together, they spend a dreamlike summer swimming in secluded lakes, reading forbidden books - and falling in love.

But with summer over, the two are sent back to Warsaw, and to the harsh realities of life under the Party. Exiled from paradise, Ludwik and Janusz must decide how they will survive; and in their different choices, find themselves torn apart.

An unforgettable debut about youth, love, and loss - and the sacrifices we make to live lives with meaning.

'Marvellous, precise, poignant writing; the reader is happy to be overwhelmed. The highest talent at work' - SEBASTIAN BARRY

You were right when you said that people can't always give us what we want...


Advance Praise

'Marvellous, precise, poignant writing; the reader is happy to be overwhelmed. The highest talent at work'
SEBASTIAN BARRY

'A young Polish author who writes rather miraculously in English, of which he has magisterial and frankly, Conradian command' GUARDIAN, BOOKS OF THE YEAR

'I began reading, and soon realized I wouldn’t be doing anything else that day. I needed to see these boys, these lovers, through to the end ... Jedrowski is a remarkable writer, alive to the ramifications of history and politics, in which the violence of a corrupt state can never fully stamp out the flourishing of beauty, grace and resistance' JUSTIN TORRES, bestselling author of We the Animals

'The surprise of Swimming in the Dark lies in its intimate ambivalence - that it captures the pleasures of everyday life behind the Iron Curtain as well as the privations. A beautiful, captivating love story that deepened my understanding of life in communist era Poland' JESSICA SHATTUCK, New York Times bestselling author of The Women in the Castle

'A lyrical exploration of the conflict between gay love and political conformity. Jedrowski is an authentic new international star' EDMUND WHITE

'Marvellous, precise, poignant writing; the reader is happy to be overwhelmed. The highest talent at work'
SEBASTIAN BARRY

'A young Polish author who writes rather miraculously in English, of which he...


Available Editions

EDITION Paperback
ISBN 9781526604989
PRICE £8.99 (GBP)

Available on NetGalley

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Average rating from 37 members


Featured Reviews

Swimming in the Dark is a beautifully written novel about trying to find love, and a place in society, as a closeted gay young man in Communist era Poland. Written effectively as a long form letter directly to an old lover back in Poland, you are immersed in the narrator’s journey, his secret desires, his frustrations and desire to escape. I’m a sucker for a novel that explores the discovery of sexual identity (see Call Me By Your Name or Lie With Me), and for stories set on the cusp of a failed soviet era state (The Last Hundred Days) and Swimming in the Dark combines these themes with devastating effect. James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room is a recurring theme, with comparisons to events there in the lives of the narrator and his lover. This worked for me having read the novel recently, but it strikes me that something would be lost if you weren’t familiar with the novel (in which case go and read it!).
This is Jedrowski’s first novel and arguably this shows in the somewhat florid similes, but i could feel the pent up desire in the narrator in their use, so on balance this is excusable (intentional?).. It’’s a wonderful debut - 4 1/2 stars more than 5 perhaps - there’s potential for a stunning second novel.

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Love in a bleak climate.

Set in 1970s-80s Poland, student Ludwik meets beautiful Janusz at agricultural camp. Over an idyllic summer they swim and fall in love. When summer is over, they return to a Warsaw riven by social unrest, political repression and exorbitant food prices. Ludwik demonstrates against the regime while Janusz seeks security within the ruling elite. As the crisis builds, their opposing political allegiances pull them apart.

Jedrowski brings alive the animal fear of living in an intolerant, corrupt and violent regime. He draws stark disparity between the haves and the have-nots. He skilfully balances the general with the personal. Ludwik has emotional depth and self-awareness. We feel his passion, jealousy, and moral dilemmas.

At times, the imagery is a little conspicuous.

Compelling and heartrending.

My thanks to NetGalley and Bloomsbury Publishing for the ARC.

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TOMASZ JEDROWSKI – SWIMMING IN THE DARK

I read this novel in advance of publication through NetGalley in return for an honest review.

What a fascinating and thought-provoking read this is. Though born in Germany, the author is of Polish descent and divides his time between Poland and England, where he studied at Cambridge. This debut novel is a towering achievement. Not only is it the story of a forbidden romance between two young men but it is set at a time, the eighties, when Poland was undergoing massive political upheaval.

For me it was this background, of which I knew little other than from newspaper headlines, which I found so engrossing. His writing is evocative, whether of the ugly Soviet bloc housing, the countryside where farmers still used horses and carts for transport, the daily queues for essential food, or a system where a bad word about the regime can lose you your home and job. A society where who you know, rather than what you know, will get you the medicine you so desperately need or admittance to a university.

The author uses the main protagonists’ opposite viewpoints to explore the party’s supposed utopia versus the increasing frustration with reality. At times it is difficult to remember that this is set in the eighties, and not at the turn of the last century.

As I say, I found this an absorbing and fascinating book, full of descriptive writing and emotional punch and realistic characters. I can more than understand the bidding war between publishers to obtain the rights to publication.

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I thoroughly enjoyed Swimming In The Dark. It tells the story of Ludwik Glowacki, a young man falling in love and coming to terms with his sexuality against the backdrop of 1980s soviet era Poland. He meets Janusz at an agricultural camp and the pair enjoy an idyllic summer romance before having to face the harsh realities of life back in Warsaw.

Tomasz Jedrowski's story surprised me in the best possible way by becoming not just an endearing gay coming of age story but also an insightful and informative account of the social and political climate in Warsaw during the era.

The contrast between Ludwik and Janusz's seemingly carefree existence at the beginning of the story and the pressures they subsequently face back in the city serves to truly emphasise the powerful and destructive nature of the soviet regime.

It is ultimately heartbreaking to read how the toxic political situation seeps into the cracks between Ludwik and Janusz, changing their behaviour and driving them apart.

Jedrowski's decision to write the book in the first person as Ludwik was incredibly effective in transporting me back in time and place in order to feel some sense of the situation he was in.

Swimming In The Dark is a story that will stay with me and has also driven me to learn more about the era and its impact on LGBT people. Highly recommend.

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