WISLAWA SZYMBORSKA (1923-2012) was a Polish poet who received international recognition when she won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1996. Collections of her poems that have been translated into English include People on a Bridge (1990), View with a Grain of Sand- Selected Poems (1995), Miracle Fair (2001), Monologue of a Dog (2005), and Map- Collected and Final Poems (2015) in which the poem Love at First Sight first appeared. Szymborska lived most of her life in Krakow; she studied Polish literature and society at Jagiellonian University and worked as an editor and columnist. A selection of her reviews was published in English under the title Nonrequired Reading- Prose Pieces (2002). She received the Polish PEN Club prize, the Goethe Prize, and the Herder Prize. BEATRICE GASCA QUEIRAZZA is an Italian illustrator and graphic designer based in Torino, Italy. She studied illustration and animation at Institute European Design in Milan and studied painting and screenprinting at Saint Martin's School in London. Her favorite materials are pencil, ink, collage and digital color. Clare Cavanagh received an NBCC award for criticism and a PEN Translation prize for her work, with Polish poet and translator Stanislaw Baranczak (1946-2014), on Szymborska's poetry.
"""[A] new, graphic book rendering of Nobel Prize in Literature-winning poet Wislawa Szymborska’s poem, “Love at First Sight.”. . . Transposing the work that Szymborska has presented in Polish to English readers is accomplished by the acute pen of long-time Szymborska translator Clare Cavanaugh, and poet and translator Stanislaw Baranczak, who teamed to dial-in the poet’s words with a devastating stillness of effect in this book from Seven Stories Press. . . . This book breathes a highly charged life into the work of an incredible poet and the whole of the work is elevated by the combination of these artist-creators. . . . Taken all together, the package that is this book and poem is compelling and its elements will spring open a door for a new slate of readers to find their way into the fabulous work of Wislawa Szymborska."" —Bruce Arlen Wasserman, New York Journal of Books ""This beautiful, indelible poem by Szymborska has trademark attention to detail—a falling leaf, a doorknob—and, too, her ever-present sense of mystery: why do our lives unfold as they do? How much does chance play in our most deeply felt decisions, and even in our dreams? Beatrice Gasca Queirazza's drawings, at once circumspect and charming, are a graceful companion to the text. A pleasure."" —Cynthia Zarin, author of Two Cities and Orbit: Poems"