He has published six books of poetry: Vaterland (1997), Anima (1999), Chata uimaita (Country Cottage, 2001), Świat i Antyświat (World and Antiworld, 2003), the book-length poem Dwanaście stacji (Twelve Stations, 2004), Kolonie (Colonies, 2006) and The Forgotten Keys (2007).
Tomasz Różycki gained critical acclaim for "Twelve Stations."
In 2004, the book-length poem won the prestigious Kościelski Foundation Prize and was named best Book of the Spring 2004 by the Raczyński Library in Poznań.
[5] In 2023, he received the Grand Continent Prize for his book The Bulb Thieves, which, according to Giuliano da Empoli, member of the Prize Jury, "doesn't actually tell much: the day of a boy in a bar of buildings in communist Warsaw, sent by his parents, who collected a bag of coffee beans, to find a grinding machine.
During his speech accepting the Prize, Tomasz Różycki declared Today, I received questions from readers who asked me if this building was in such and such a place, because they thought they recognized their own windows there, their own lives.