Jerzy Kosinski was a Polish-American novelist who emigrated to the United States and won acclaim — and lasting controversy — for harrowing, allegorical fiction including The Painted Bird and Being There.
Jerzy Kosinski survived the Second World War as a child in Poland before emigrating to the United States, where he reinvented himself as a writer in English. His debut novel, The Painted Bird (1965), a nightmarish account of a boy’s wanderings through a brutal wartime countryside, established him as a major literary figure and remains his most famous and controversial work.
His later novel Being There, a satire about a simple-minded gardener mistaken for a sage, was adapted into a celebrated film. But Kosinski’s career was shadowed by persistent controversy over the authenticity of The Painted Bird’s presentation as autobiography and over questions about his methods of composition.
Kosinski died in 1991. His work, particularly The Painted Bird, remains powerful and disturbing, though it is now read with awareness of the serious questions surrounding its authorship and claims to truth.