
Czesław Miłosz was a Nobel Prize winning poet and author of Polish-Lithuanian heritage. He memorialised his Lithuanian childhood in a 1955 novel, The Issa Valley , and in the 1959 memoir Native Realm . After graduating from Sigismund Augustus Gymnasium in Vilnius, he studied law at Stefan Batory University and in 1931 he travelled to Paris, where he was influenced by his distant cousin Oscar Milosz, a French poet of Lithuanian descent and a Swedenborgian. His first volume of poetry was published in 1934. After receiving his law degree that year, he again spent a year in Paris on a fellowship. Upon returning, he worked as a commentator at Radio Wilno, but was dismissed, an action described as stemming from either his leftist views or for views overly sympathetic to Lithuania. Miłosz wrote all his poetry, fiction, and essays in Polish and translated the Old Testament Psalms into Polish. Awarded the 1980 Nobel Prize in Literature for being an author "who with uncompromising clear-sightedness voices man's exposed condition in a world of severe conflicts."
Books

New and Collected Poems
1931-2001
2001

Proud to be a Mammal
2010

Dāvana
2021

Tremor
Selected Poems
1985

The Captive Mind
1953

A Treatise on Poetry
2001

The Mountains of Parnassus
2012

Selected Poems
1973

The History of Polish Literature
1969

A Year of the Hunter
1994

Facing The River
1994

Unattainable Earth
1986

The Issa Valley
1955

To Begin Where I Am
Selected Essays
2001

Complete Poems
2011

Conversations
1981

Provinces
1991

Road-side Dog
1997

Second Space
New Poems
2002

The Land of Ulro
1977

Legends of Modernity
Essays and Letters from Occupied Poland, 1942-1943
2005

Visions from San Francisco Bay
1969

Beginning with My Streets
1992

The Witness of Poetry
1983

Milosz's ABC's
1997

Emperor of the Earth
Modes of Eccentric Vision
1977

The Seizure of Power
1955

The Separate Notebooks
1984

Bells In Winter
1978

Native Realm
A Search for Self-Definition
1959

The Rag and Bone Shop of the Heart
A Poetry Anthology
1992