He is mainly associated with Wiadomości Literackie (a literary newspaper) and the liberal artistic bohemia of the Polish interwar period, including Skamander.
He is mentioned in many literary testimonies of the era, appearing in the works of Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz (Aleja Przyjaciół), Irena Krzywicka (Wyznania gorszycielki), Witold Gombrowicz (Wspomnienia polskie), Zofia Nałkowska (Dzienniki), Anna Iwaszkiewicz, and in the letters of Czesław Miłosz.
A Civilian in Berlin, 1934), in which he made in-depth and accurate observations regarding the mechanism of the expansion of totalitarianism in Germany.
Demonstratively reluctant about fascism and nationalism, he praised the British constitutional monarchy system and European culture.
Iwaszkiewicz emphasized his friendship with Achilles Breza, comparing them to Oscar Wilde and Lord Douglas,[4] and Irena Krzywicka his relationship with Jan Tarnowski.
He also worked for BBC radio and wrote for the Polish émigré magazine Wiadomości Polskie, Polityczne i Literackie.
[citation needed] He later tried to move to the United States, where he owned a small estate in Santa Fe.
[3] He earned recognition and fame through a series of reports from Germany, which appeared periodically in Wiadomości Literackie, and which illustrated the emergence of Nazism after Adolf Hitler came to power.