I just finished reading “Solaris” by Lem and wanted to put somewhere my thoughts about it. I’m from Poland so I always thought I should know Lem better but before Solaris I’ve only read “The Invincible”. I’ve seen the Hollywood movie years ago which didn’t proved to be much of a spoiler. So, my thoughts, without spoilers I think…
Lem had a great imagination. The concept of Solaris, it’s exploration and the idea of trying to communicate with it brilliant and original. The way Lem describes it not so much. Half of the book is just a very dry recounting of its history and behavior. It’s well written but it’s just a background for the actual story. The actual story itself is bizarrely the complete opposite: it’s interesting but terribly written. It contains the worst dialogs I’ve ever read (and I read the original version, not translation). If not for the well written descriptions of the planet I would assume I’m reading something translated by Google Translate. I think I understand now why so many Philip K. Dick’s books were successfully turned into movies but Lem’s were not. He was great at coming up with interesting concepts but not that good at telling stories. I would like to know what others think about it.
P.S. Another thing I straggled with (and I know it’s just something I don’t like personally, that’s why it’s just a side note ) is the way Lem describes or invents the tech of the future. Basically he doesn’t. His worlds are still analog with printed books, microfilm and lamp based computers (The invincible was the same with computers programmed using perforated paper). I’ve checked and Solaris was written in 1969 while the first hard drive was commercialized in 1966. I think Lem was more interested in physics and modern tech simply wasn’t his thing. He would take was he saw around him (probably usually tech many years old already) and put it in the future without thinking to much about it. Is it just me or do others also find it jarring?

“The Invincible” was definitely tech focused, hard sci-fi, so I guess in different books he would simply focuses on different things. Which is completely fine. From the two books I’ve read I would say he definitely struggled with computers but maybe he has some books about them too :)
Weird thing is that while I love SF movies that focus on philosophy of psychology (Gattaca, Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind, Never let me go, Moon, Realive, The Platform…) I like my books to be more detailed and tech focused (Banks).