Born in
Rzeszów, Juliusz Kazimierz Kaden-Bandrowski studied
piano at
conservatories in
Lwów,
Kraków and
Leipzig. While studying at
Brussels, he switched his interests to
philosophy. During
World War I, he served as aide to
Józef Piłsudski and as
chronicler to the
First Brigade of the
Polish Legions. In 1907 he had begun working as a correspondent for the Polish press. After World War I, he associated himself with the
Skamander group of Polish experimental poets founded in 1918, and in 1933 joined the Polish Academy of Literature. During
World War II, Kaden-Bandrowski declined to leave German-occupied
Warsaw, to which he had moved during the
Interbellum. He participated in underground teaching and gave music lessons. He was arrested and interrogated by the
Gestapo. He died on 8 August 1944 in
Warsaw, a week into the
Warsaw Uprising. His novels show insights and fidelity to facts;
behaviorist and
expressionist elements; and combinations of different styles and literary techniques. == Family ==