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(Redirected from Talk:Tomasz Jedrowski)

Article nominated for DYK for 11 October 2020

[edit]
The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page. No further edits should be made to this page.

The result was: promoted by Cwmhiraeth (talk06:32, 13 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Created by Nigetastic (talk). Self-nominated at 12:18, 12 October 2020 (UTC).[reply]

  • I don't know enough about the topic to give an opinion on the notability concerns, but I do note that the hook is more about the book than the bolded link (the author himself), which is fine and perfectly acceptable for hooks (we've had several similar hooks in the past before), but also suggests that other possible suggestions could also be proposed here in case that falls through. Narutolovehinata5 tccsdnew 10:02, 25 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • The article was kept at the deletion discussion, and new sources were suggested for expanding the article. The birth date listed in the introduction does not appear to be cited anywhere in the article and needs to be addressed. Would the nominator be interested in citing the birth date and expanding the article with the new sources? Flibirigit (talk) 19:34, 29 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Flibirigit: Hello, Flibirigit. It's nice to hear from you. The author's birth year and location were already in the first ref, but that's a Polish-language periodical. I've now updated that citation include both the original Polish statement and an English translation. For the additional material, I penned the third paragraph under "Career" ("Many regions of Poland declared themselves LGBT-free zones in 2019[7], and Polish president ...") to include several more facts and three citations during the AfD discussion. For a re-write of the hook focused more on the author and less on the book, how would this work: ALT1 ... that Tomasz Jędrowski wrote his debut novel, Swimming in the Dark, a gay love story set in Communist Poland "to revive, to resuscitate, the queerness that had been silenced"? Thanks for your comments and attention.Nigetastic (talk) 20:16, 29 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • Thanks. No rush. I thought the AfD process killed its opportunity to be in DYK, so thanks for your consideration. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Nigetastic (talkcontribs)
General: Article is new enough and long enough

Policy compliance:

Hook eligibility:

  • Cited: No - ?
  • Interesting: Yes
QPQ: None required.

Overall: Article moved to mainspace on October 11 and nominated within seven days. Prose is at least 1,500 characters and meets length requirement. Article appears to be neutral in tone. No plagiarism issues detected. Article is mostly sourced, but a direct quote in the third paragraph is missing a citation directly after the sentence. It is preferable that the birth year and location be cited in the main body of prose, rather than in an introduction or infobox. No photos are used in the article. QPQ is not required as the nominator has less than five credits. The proposed hook is reasonbly interesting, but I ran into difficulty in verifying the citation for it. The statement "is a gay love story set in the closing years of the Polish People's Republic" is only mentioned explicity in the introduction and should be repeated somewhere in the main prose. Also, some readers may not equate the wording "twilight of Communist Poland" to "closing years of the Polish People's Republic". I suggest making the wording more similar. Also, the first sentence in the second paragraph which supports the hook would need a citation directly at its end as per DYK rules on citing a hook. Overall the nomination is interesting and I am happy to see it passed the AFD process. Flibirigit (talk) 23:39, 29 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]

  • @Flibirigit: Thanks for your attention and comments. Could you say which direct quote is uncited? If it's "to revive, to resuscitate, the queerness..." that sentence AND the one following it both came from the VICE piece. Ref #10 supports the previous two sentences. It wasn't possible to include his three thoughts ("...there’s a lot of anxiety...," "...to revive, to resuscitate, the queerness...," and "...also an homage and celebration of Polish culture...") into one passage without it being a long, clumsy run-on sentence. If the solution is to cite the first sentence and then 'ibid' the second, I'd be glad to do that. Also happy to write his statement about his age into the intro. Please confirm that I've understood your citation concern correctly. Thanks.Nigetastic (talk) 12:42, 30 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • The quote "to revive, to resuscitate, the queerness that had been silenced" needs to have citation directly at its end, even if it means repeating the same citation later on in the paragraph. Flibirigit (talk) 15:24, 30 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • The first sentence in the second paragraph of the Career section which supports the hook needs a citation directly at its end as per DYK rules on citing a hook. I also recommend copying the sentence "is a gay love story set in the closing years of the Polish People's Republic" from the introduction and putting it into the second paragraph. In other words, having it both in the introduction and the career section is what I meant by "should be repeated somewhere in the main prose". Ideally hooks are entirely cited in the main prose (career section) rather than in the introduction. Flibirigit (talk) 17:19, 30 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Flibirigit: I've followed your suggestions. Thank you. Repeated the 'is a gay love story' phrase at the top of the second 'graph in 'career.' Ref #6 supported both the second and third sentences. Rather than repeat the citation, I combined these two sentennces into one sentence, which reads better like this at any rate. Thanks.Nigetastic (talk) 18:30, 30 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • I am also approving the first alternate hook labelled ALT1, in addition to ALT0. It is mentioned inline in two separate parts, both of which are cited and verified. I apologize that I forgot about it earlier. Flibirigit (talk) 01:07, 31 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, I came by to promote this, but the article seems to be more about the book than the author. If the author is notable, then more should be added about him, with reliable references. Do you want to move this page to Swimming in the Dark? Yoninah (talk) 20:03, 31 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Yoninah: Hello there. Thanks for stopping by and sharing your comments. By way of some background, I worked up this article bc I read the novel and liked it enough. The book seems to me to hang on the author better than the author hangs on the book, although others have made your same suggestion. The author's and the novel's notability, while not high, were ruminated over at length and adjudicated as adequate here in DYK, in the entry's Talk page, and in the AfD process. I made tweaks and offered compromises. I learned a lot, both cautionary and positive, about wikipedian culture and procedure. I'm still flexible. But maybe I'm feeling election fatigue, but having another round of disputation about this is something I have no will or the juice to do. The question of the article's existence seems to have been settled. I've said all along that I had no strong feelings about DYK. Nominating it was not my idea. I think enough people would like to see this, but the novelist has gotten quite a lot of attention in the mainstream media, so I don't feel the need to draw more attention to him or myself by appearing on DYK. If you want to cancel the nomination, I'm not going to resist. Nigetastic (talk) 16:34, 1 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Nigetastic: thank you for your note. Yes, I read the AFD and talk page discussions after posting here. We do frequently post start-class articles at DYK, which this would be if it was just about the book. But as I said, if it's going to be about the author, you need more references to show notability. Are you willing to expand it with more references? Yoninah (talk) 17:00, 1 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Yoninah: Thanks for your quick reply. If you could some quantity "expand with more references" I'd certainly consider it. Please don't take this as sarcasm, but in this process I have sometimes felt passed from one editor to another, and each would have an insistent but vague need that seemed to relate to written guidelines but sometimes felt like idiosyncratic or selective interpretations because the previous editor might have referred to the same guidelines and come up with a different point of view. You're saying something's missing. Could you somehow describe the contours of that hole? Jedrowski's early life and his parents? His marriage? How he switched from law to writing? The fact that a gay-themed Eastern European novel following Garth Greenwell's pair about Bulgaria looks like a trend of sorts? I just need this to stop feeling like an open-ended time commitment. Also, at this point, what are we discussing--where you'll let the thing go into DYK (from which I'm starting to think I should run and not ever return) or you'll open up the AfD process again? Thank you. Nigetastic (talk) 17:40, 1 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Nigetastic: I'm sorry you feel you're being shunted around. The fact that this article survived AFD shows that it is OK for Wikipedia. But we at DYK are putting these articles on the main page, which has a much higher level of inspection by readers and other editors across the project. Right now you have 3 sentences about him as a person, and the rest of the article is about the book. You do need more references to verify that he is notable—such as feature articles about him or interviews with him. The subheads would be: Early life and education, Career, Personal life. Honestly, I don't understand why you don't rename this article Swimming in the Dark and just rearrange what you have to: Synopsis, Development, Publication history, Author. When he writes another book, you can spin off the Author section into its own page. I could help you with the reorganization if you want. Yoninah (talk) 18:32, 1 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Flibirigit and Yoninah: Thank you both for your responses. I do not have strong feelings about whether the article is a bio of Jedrowski or about the novel. My intention was to write about Jedrowski, and in my mind I did that. The publishing world would read it that way because the entry mentions only scant details about the book. If I'd been penning an entry about the book, I would have looked up and cited not just who published it in the UK and the US, but who in other Anglophone territories and in what month(s) and in what initial quantities? Did it go out in cloth first or go straight to paper? Was the acquiring editor relevant? Does it fit into some evolving trend in LGBTQ lit? How is LGBTQ fiction selling these days? Other translations in the works yet? . . . That would be a book entry of substance. The plot too, sure, but that's not usually what makes a novel significant or even good. Jedrowski's birth in Germany to Polish parents and his preference for English and his intention to respond to and to complicate discourses about LGBTQ rights in contemporary Poland, that's about him. That's why I made this choice. I could re-write this with the same facts to center Jedrowski in a more literal way: swap, say, Publisher’s Weekly calling the novel “dazzling” for the Evening Standard saying Jedrowski has “a background story which is enough to arouse the curiosity of readers on the lookout for distinctive new voices.” But if it had to go one way or the other, this is an author bio. — But, look, I appreciate everyone's passion and attention. I've learned more about Wikipedia in three weeks than in the previous ten years. If the collective opinion here is that the, let's say, taxonomy of Wikipedia entries makes this an entry not about the author but about the book, that’s fine. And if it’s not even a good entry about the book but only a stub, that doesn’t hurt my feelings. I’m here to observe your criteria not turn Wikipedia into Publishers Weekly. If you’re saying this article as-is is a stub that needs fleshing out with a summary, critical analysis, pub history, etc., well, I could do some of that provisionally, but, look, I’m speaking to you from the trenches of academia, it’ll be 12-18 months before a review shows up in QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking or Slavic Review. It'll have to wait. If the status quo is inelegant but acceptable, mightn’t we simply let this thing exist as-is on the assumption that other editors will find it? Fans of gay novels outnumber gay novels. Someone will read that book and develop a burning zeal to work up a 300-word synopsis of the plot. — In the meantime, if your suggestion is that I change the title to make this about the book, yes, I’ll do that. But, first, if “renaming” it is a short-hand way of saying “moving” it and moving it requires a few key steps, please say what those are. And if the result is that the novel is the lemma and the page then needs a new infobox and a jpg of the right specs and resolution uploaded and declared fair us, etc. etc. then I’m going to beg your forgiveness if I leave that for someone else. — If it doesn’t fit your DYK criteria, that’s totally fine. As I said, I didn’t know it was there till someone suggested I bring this here. Nigetastic (talk) 20:11, 1 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Nigetastic: When I first came to the article to promote it for DYK, I started moving things around before realizing this was about the author and not the book. I'm happy to make things easy for you: I'll move the page and do a quick edit on the material you have now, and we could promote that as a start-class article to the main page. Then, certainly, other readers can come along and improve the article. Let me know. Yoninah (talk) 20:21, 1 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Yoninah: That would be fine. Many thanks for you help and have a great weekend. Nigetastic (talk) 20:26, 1 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Nigetastic: OK, that was pretty easy because, as I said, your article was mostly about the book anyway. :) Please look over what I did. I see you have a bunch of sources that are actually reviews. Would you be able to add a line or two of commentary from each review under the Reception section? That would help a lot. I'll get busy on categorization. Yoninah (talk) 21:07, 1 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Well @Nigetastic:, I have a queery for you; I was planning on writing the book article myself and had already been researching (English) references, which I have plenty.
The choice is yours, I’m ok either way. We can: 1. Leave your article as being about the book, and I’ll step back; or, 2. Switch back to how it was before the move, you can research more for his biography, and I’ll create a book article (and possibly try for another DYK). There’s no rush but think over what you prefer, and we can go by that. Gleeanon 00:17, 2 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Nigetastic:@Gleeanon409: Another idea would be for you, Gleeanon409, to edit, expand, and improve the book article that you see now. Then you can be included as a co-creator on this DYK nomination. We're not in a huge rush here; if you want a week or two to work on expanding and improving it, we'll wait. Yoninah (talk) 00:26, 2 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • Placing nomination on hold until a decision in made on biography or book article, or perhaps both. If indeed two article are made, I will extend the courtesy of reviewing both. Whatever the outcome, I will return to this nomination and complete a review. Flibirigit (talk) 00:32, 2 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • My preference and specialty is creating from scratch, call it controlling if that works, then I launch it into the world. Otherwise I’d rather leave it for someone else to fiddle with.
    Also it occurs to me that @Nigetastic: would be better at doing the author research as he can deal with presumably Polish sources which I wouldn’t want to try to interpret. Gleeanon 00:37, 2 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Nigetastic: OK, this is what needs to be done before we turn over the re-review to Flibirigit:
    1. Add a citation for this sentence: It was published simultaneously in a Polish translation by Robert Sudół as Płynąc w ciemnościach, OsnoVa, 2020.
    2. Do you have any more to add to the Synopsis? (It does not need to be sourced, but cannot be copied from a source.)
    3. Can you expand the Reception section with any of the comments in the reviews that you already cited?
  • Thanks, Yoninah (talk) 12:56, 2 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Yoninah: Sorry to be getting to this late this evening. Long day at the office. I needed to sort out the publication history. The existing copy had Morrow doing the English and Osnova doing a simultaneous Polish, which needed a citation. In fact, Bloomsbury went first in February with English in the UK. The Polish was a day or two later--we'd still call that simultaneously. Morrow did North America in April. I've stated that as succinctly as possible in one paragraph. I cited the Polish publishers website. I hope it's not too obscure for some editors, but Publishers Weekly indication that the book pubbed in April is a fairly understated "(Apr.)" at the end of the review. For something more explicit, one could, I suppose go to Amazon, but PW is the industry bible. I'll need to take a crack at the others tomorrow. Enough of the reviews tease out the plot well enough to add 2-3 sentences without spoilers. (Spoiler: not a happy ending). I can do the reviews at the same time since those will necessarily draw on different passages from the same reviews. Thanks again. With hope when we meet here again we'll have some political news to lift our spirits. Nigetastic (talk) 01:41, 3 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Second review

General: Article is new enough and long enough
Policy: Article is sourced, neutral, and free of copyright problems

Hook eligibility:

  • Cited: No - ?
  • Interesting: Yes
QPQ: None required.

Overall: Article still meets newness requirements. Length and sourcing are adequate. Article is neutral in tone. No plagiarism issues detected. No photos are used in the article. QPQ still not required. Previous hooks ALT0 and ALT1 are now declined. ALT2 is interesting, but the wording "makes frequent allusions to" does not appear in this article, in comparison to "as a major influence". Is there a more similar wording solution? Another possible hook could use the phrase "hotly contested six-way publishing auction". Cheers. Flibirigit (talk) 00:38, 4 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]

  • @Flibirigit: Could we sidestep the issue by saying:
  • @Flibirigit: Please don't take this as snark, but I only deployed "featured" as a more interesting way to say "is." How would you feel about something very neutral, just locative: "is," "appears," or "shows up"? Namely:
  • If you want a word to tie back to an exact citation, there is a Slate magazine review that reads: "The looping in of Giovanni’s Room as a meta text also deepens rather than deflects from Jedrowski’s ...". I could cite the Slant article someplace in the article and then we could say "...both inspired in part and is looped into the 2020 novel." Using "looped in" there is a curious choice of words--as if we phoned Baldwin into a conference call--but that's the way the author of the review used it. Nigetastic (talk) 01:41, 4 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Flibirigit and Yoninah: Good morning. I'm very happy to have you all settle on some final form for the hook. I'm in a coffee break at work and thought I'd offer this version. I just gave the last version a good, hard edit and framed "Giovanni" as "influencing" (from the existing article) and "appearing in":
  • Please format new hook suggestions using ALT in bold font and increase the number by one, and start the hook on a new line instead of in the middle of a paragraph. It is very difficult to sort out what is being proposed from long paragraphs. I have reformatted the above hooks, and I still waiting a reply from Yoninah. Flibirigit (talk) 15:48, 4 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
I have considered all of the hooks above and I am approving ALT5, and rejecting all others. The wording in ALT5 is more concise and interesting, it is mentioned inline, properly cited and verified by the sources. ALT2 is rejected because "makes frequent allusions to" is not supported by the article. ALT3 is rejected for being too wordy and "features in" is subjective when the article says it is simply mentioned. ALT4 is rejected because it focuses on the older book. ALT6 is rejected because the wording "plays a pivotal role" is very subjective and I do not see it supported by the article. Also, if anyone wants to propse hooks based on "hotly contested six-way publishing auction" or the "anxiety of LGBT rights in Poland", I would be very receptive to consider them and revisit the nomination. Overall, this has been a very long process, but I sincerely hope this book does get featured in the DYK sectio,n and that the nominator continues to contribute. Flibirigit (talk) 18:33, 4 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Flibirigit and Yoninah: Hello there. Thank you for the encouragement. I wasn't sure that anyone outside of publishing would get jazzed about a publishing auction. And I feared leading with the LGBT rights angle would give the appearance of politicizing DYK. I'm glad to see the article and its possible use in DYK survive, but many people pitched in and I don't feel like I own it. I'm ready to take a back seat in the process. If someone else feels passionate about framing this another way, that's OK with me. Nigetastic (talk) 20:29, 4 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Nigetastic: we've really spent a lot of time of this and it's time to move on. As you saw from my talk page discussion, there are any number of people who want to rewrite articles their own way. You just have to put your article out there and let other people add or subtract as they will (be sure to watchlist it!). Thanks for the tick, Flibirigit. I formatted ALT5. Yoninah (talk) 20:45, 4 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Flibirigit and Yoninah: Quite happy to move on. The book is receding too far in my memory now to engage with it. Thank you both. Hope to see this in DYK in the fullness of time. Nigetastic (talk) 22:16, 4 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Notability

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I wonder if this doesn't run afoul of WP:ONEEVENT (as well as WP:WRITER). His only accomplishment so far is publishing a single novel. I'd think the novel may be notable, but he is not notable yet, as there sources about him are just WP:INTERVIEWS and mentions in passing, but the reviews of the novel are likely already sufficient for meeting WP:NBOOK. --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 08:43, 13 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]

  • @Piotrus and Nihil novi: This is not logical. On 10/13, you conceded that the novel is possibly notable, but the author is not, so I offered to switch the article from one about the author to one about the book. Now you write that this article is a "shameless promotion" of the book, although the article is still about the author. Without disclosing who I am, I again say that I have no professional or personal relationship with the author, publisher, or anyone associated with the project. I read the book, liked it, thought it was doing something interesting in contemporary literature, and wrote the article on my own. Knowing that LGBT rights are a sensitive subject in Poland just now, I avoided any discussion of contemporary politics there. Your suggestion that the review in "The Evening Standard," a generally conservative newspaper, is biased in the book's favor because you think the reviewer may be gay is not a fair criticism. . . . You invited user:Nihil novi to comment, and s/he observed that many authors with one novel have wiki articles; e.g., Margaret Mitchell. I have no comment or strong opinion about the evolution of the DYK feature. This is my first submission there, and I did it at the suggestion of another editor. Nigetastic (talk) 18:50, 14 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • shameless promotion is putting it in the DYK, i.e., at the Main Page of wikipedia, i.e., undeserved attention. Staszek Lem (talk) 20:28, 14 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • @Piotrus and Nihil novi: If you're saying that you will stop objecting to the existence of the article if I stop suggesting it appear in DYK, I would accept that compromise. Can we agree to that please?
If the novel has in fact garnered a notable degree of readership, I wouldn't object to DYK and article.
If need be, the article could later be scrapped.
Nihil novi (talk) 20:45, 14 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
      • @Piotrus and Nihil novi:It *is* very notable that a first-time novelist would get a US$100,00+ advance and this much publicity. Most first-time authors get none of either. I publish 4-5 a debut novels a year, and most sell 500-600 copies. "Swimming" had had tremendous success. So yeah, it's unusual in that way. I *agree* with Piotrus that the entries in DYK should have a human-interest intent and not a commercial one, however. That's why I wrote the hook to highlight the literary connection to James Baldwin and "Giovanni's Room." . . . I'm new enough to this that I don't know what the choices are. If I can simply ignore Piotrus's objections, I guess I can sleep on that for a night. My main interest in DYK was just to see how it works and how it fits into Wikipedia life and culture. If ignoring Piotrus's objections is going to make him an enemy, I don't really want to go down that path with anyone.— Preceding unsigned comment added by Nigetastic (talkcontribs) 06:12, October 15, 2020 (UTC)

Note: some additional discussion of the subject's notability has taken place on my talk page. I am getting a vague feeling that I am the only one who thinks the subject may not be notable: ping User:Nihil novi and User:Staszek Lem - could you clearly express your thoughts on whether this person passes WP:CREATIVE/WP:NBIO? If all of you think he is notable, I won't object to removing the notability template. --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 03:47, 16 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]

I agree that the author is not notable, but the book is. I think the page should be renamed Swimming in the Dark and reorganized to include a short author bio and the rest of the regular sections for a book: Synopsis, Development, Publication, Reception. More reviews should be added. Yoninah (talk) 20:05, 31 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Name: Jędrowski vs Jedrowski

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There was some discussion of this on my talk page. I will copy relevant excerpts here (removing small off-topic parts). --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 03:46, 16 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]

I moved him per the spelling of his name on Polish sources like [1]. I did not realize he was not born in Poland. But since his Polish book edition uses the diacritic [2], I think he is ok with it. But it is really strange he chose not to use it for the English publication [3]. This is the first case like this I've seen. Ha. Ping User:Nihil novi for his two cents. --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 01:08, 14 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]

This writer reminds me of Polish Romantic poet Adam Mickiewicz, who has been described as "a Belarusian poet who wrote about Lithuania in Polish."
Tomasz J ? drowski is a German-born novelist who writes about Poland in English.
His only novel, Swimming in the Dark, was published in 2020 in the original English; and simultaneously in Polish in Robert Sudół's translation.
Since English appears to be his principal literary language, I would be inclined to honor his own choice of surname spelling on the original, English versions of his writings: Tomasz Jedrowski.
Nihil novi (talk) 02:28, 14 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
@Staszek Lem and Nihil novi: Hello there. Speaking as someone in publishing who works with translations--although I have no connection of any kind to this novel, author, or publisher--it's not strange or not strange on Jędrowski's part that "he chose not use it [Polish spelling] for the English translation." The publisher would have made the decision. Also, I think Jędrowski did the translation himself, otherwise the translator's name would have been in the frontmatter or on the book jacket of the Polish edition. This would not be unusual. Nabokov wrote Lolita in English and then translated the novel into Russian himself. Nigetastic (talk) 11:31, 14 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Under "Informacje dodatkowe" ("Additional information"), the following source lists Robert Sudół as the translator into Polish:
https://www.inbook.pl/plynac-w-ciemnosciach-tomasz-jedrowski-mobi (link courtesy of Xx236).
Tomasz Jedrowski might be viewed as Tomasz Jędrowski's English pseudonym, as "Joseph Conrad" was the English pseudonym of Józef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski.
Nihil novi (talk) 20:04, 17 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Possible sourcing

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@Nigetastic:, here are the sources I found, mostly reviews. I would use them in the basic order as I think the stronger ones are on the top. Gleeanon 07:40, 3 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]

possible sources

[edit]

References

  1. ^ Cook, L., Eppen, M., West, L., Lewis, M., Vagg, M., Woledge, M., ... & Grace, J. (2020). Fiction {Book Review}. Good Reading, (Apr 2020), 36.
  2. ^ Mortimer, Gavin (2020-08-30). The SAS in Occupied France: 2 SAS Operations, June to October 1944. Pen and Sword Military. ISBN 978-1-5267-6965-7.
  3. ^ "Books in Review". World Literature Today. 94 (2): 77. 2020. doi:10.7588/worllitetoda.94.2.0077.
  4. ^ Taras, R. (2020). World Literature Today, 94(2), 88-89. doi:10.7588/worllitetoda.94.2.0088a
  5. ^ "Tomasz Jedrowski's Debut Novel Tells Teenage Love Story In '80s Poland". NPR.org. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  6. ^ "In brief: As If By Chance; Swimming in the Dark; Plume – reviews". the Guardian. 2020-02-23. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  7. ^ Woodhead, Cameron (2020-03-27). "Fiction reviews: Swimming in the Dark and three other titles". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  8. ^ Delany, Ella (2009-12-01). "Law Programs for an Interconnected World (Published 2009)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  9. ^ "'Swimming in the Dark'; a balanced, ideally paced novel". The Bay Area Reporter / B.A.R. Inc. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  10. ^ Tribune, Claude PeckStar. "Debut novel examines a forbidden love in Poland". telegram.com. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  11. ^ "QUINN ON BOOKS: "Black Lives Matter"". Red Hook Star-Revue. 2020-07-03. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  12. ^ Seward, Mahoro (2020-09-02). "The exhibition showcasing Russia's LGBTQ+ diversity". i-D. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  13. ^ "Your guide to LGBTQ literature to read this Pride Month". Vogue India. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  14. ^ Woodhead, Cameron (2020-03-27). "Fiction reviews: Swimming in the Dark and three other titles". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  15. ^ "In brief: As If By Chance; Swimming in the Dark; Plume – reviews". the Guardian. 2020-02-23. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  16. ^ "Bibliophile | 'Swimming in the Dark' shares cross-cultural love story". OUTInPerth - LGBTIQ News and Culture. 2020-03-01. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  17. ^ "New on the book shelf: June 6, 2020". The Daily Journal. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  18. ^ May 22; Pm, 2020-2:35. "Reviews: 'American Sherlock,' by Kate Winkler Dawson, and 'Swimming in the Dark,' by Tomasz Jedrowski". Star Tribune. Retrieved 2020-10-18. {{cite web}}: |first2= has numeric name (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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  20. ^ "Novels from Poland, Norway and Crescent City". ABC Radio National. 2020-03-18. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  21. ^ Honigmann, Meg (2020-07-13). "#BazaarBookClub: 10 modern love stories to read now". Harper's BAZAAR. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  22. ^ Koehler, Mimi (2020-06-13). "LGBTQ+ Alphabet Recommendations: G for Gay Fiction". The Nerd Daily. Retrieved 2020-10-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  23. ^ "Spring 2020 book season reading list". The Bay Area Reporter / B.A.R. Inc. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  24. ^ "9 Books Perfect For Mother's Day & You'll Want To Read Them Too". Bustle. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  • @Gleeanon409: OMG. This saves me so much time. Thank you. Thank you.

Words

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Throughout the whole of the novel the word 'gay' is never used once and certainly not in the context of relationships or sexuality. That is highly significant. Hence, to call is a 'gay' love story is disengenuous and out of keeping with the work as an account of life at the time it was written. 2A00:23C5:7F1F:9401:855C:2CBF:E691:C02C (talk) 11:57, 25 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Gay

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I read this novel carefully and it never used the word 'gay' in the context of LGBT or homosexuality. Claiming it is a gay novel is to be deprectated. 2A00:23C5:7F1F:9401:7086:20C9:971:D357 (talk) 13:53, 16 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]