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  • Published: 2 December 2025
  • ISBN: 9781962770392
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 424
  • RRP: $55.00

Needle's Eye




A rich, polyphonic novel from one of the leading voices of contemporary Polish literature, encompassing a half-century of history and memory


 
In a Polish village, a young man watches an old man trip and fall down a flight of stairs. From this singular event arises a cascade of memories, regrets, and longings: the buried sensations of a whole lifetime, condensed and released. We hear of life during occupation, the scarcities of a childhood lived under the sign of war—and fragments of a home’s sounds and scents (the private speech of mothers and fathers, the treasures of coffee, raisins, almonds, and plums). There are loves unrequited and fulfilled, landscapes of winter and spring, old jobs and old friends, all flowing together.

Wiesław Myśliwski’s latest novel is a personal epic written on the smallest scale. Its narrator, a medieval historian in his latter years, lives surrounded by images of the past. From within this wandering mind, Myśliwski has composed his own ode to lost time, a nonlinear, chameleonic meditation on a half-century of Polish life as it does not appear in the historical record. Part autobiography, part dreambook, Needle’s Eye is both a writer’s farewell to the Poland of his youth and an extended address, like the final lecture prepared by its narrator, on the persistence and necessity of memory.

  • Published: 2 December 2025
  • ISBN: 9781962770392
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 424
  • RRP: $55.00

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Praise for Needle's Eye

"Like Anjet Daanje’s The Remembered Soldier or Gao Xingjian’s Soul Mountain, Wiesław Myśliwski’s narrator reminiscing is triggered by trauma. Old age revives the need to bring closure to his unfulfilled first love and sends him into a dizzying pollarding of memory that turns Needle’s Eye into a masterful phenomenology of introspection." —Alice Catherine Carl, World Literature Today


"History and personal experience converge in this evocative, layered exploration of the workings of memory—both collective and individual." —Ángel Gurría-Quintana, Financial Times' "Best books of 2025"

"Myśliwski's reluctance to name his protagonists creates an omniscient, impersonal narrative that sweeps readers along, at times uncertain of the who or the when, but savoring the flurry of memories . . . Timelines are layered like an Escher painting, linking beginnings and ends, expressing both the unity and continuity of nature." —Brock Covington, The Active Mind