"In the late '80s, one of the stories was adapted for public television, with the principals changed from Ridiculously Human Robots to Human Aliens (but nonetheless quite well-cast.)"
He is actually widely published, but not in English. In Poland he has published more than 50 books. He was translated into 44 languages. KGB and FBI were the first to buy his essays :D Also, he is renewed every year in my country, I dare to say more than million copies in a country inhabited by 36 million potential readers. I am though glad to hear you like him and I find him (still) underappreciated as well.
I just got my copy of The Cyberiad today, can't wait to get into it.
mrt2931 4 months ago
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"In the late '80s, one of the stories was adapted for public television, with the principals changed from Ridiculously Human Robots to Human Aliens (but nonetheless quite well-cast.)"
TheStation55 6 months ago
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TheStation55 6 months ago
Lem is without a doubt the best SF author no one reads.
polymath7 2 years ago 9
He is actually widely published, but not in English. In Poland he has published more than 50 books. He was translated into 44 languages. KGB and FBI were the first to buy his essays :D Also, he is renewed every year in my country, I dare to say more than million copies in a country inhabited by 36 million potential readers. I am though glad to hear you like him and I find him (still) underappreciated as well.
Iyoossaev 2 years ago 5