"Her alabaster skin" -- this about Fringilla
Its a stupid thing to say, but its not entirely inaccurate. The Witcher is a highly derivative work, borrowing heavily from fantasy stories that the author grew up reading (Tolkien, Elric, Conan, early D&D, etc.). Suffice it to say, if Sapkowski grew up 30 years later, he would've been exposed to a much different canon of fantasy novels, with very different tropes. The female protagonist whose only defining characteristic is being female is very much a trope of modern fantasy and is, sadly, going to remain an element in the stories of people who are now being influenced by modern fantasy.
Sapkowski was probably just virtue signalling, but, again, he's probably also right: if he wrote the Witcher today, the Witcher would probably be a black lesbian fighting racism in fantasy poland because that's what most modern fantasy is about.
Sapkowski blatantly plagiarized the Witcher from Elric of Melnibone.
1. Snarky, world-weary, albino sellsword outcast who needs potions for his unnaturally long life
2. Travels the world slaying monsters while multiple factions try to manipulate him into doing their bidding
3. The only one of his kind with emotions or empathy
4. Fornicates at every opportunity
5. Longs for his raven-haired sorceress true love
6. His fantasy world is an allegory of the decadence of the author's home country (Moorcock/UK in the 60's, Sapkowski/Poland in the 80's).
7. Both live in a universe/multiverse where a cosmological event called the Conjunction of the (Million, removed by Sapkowski) Spheres.
8. Even if these are superficial similarities, Sapkowski would not even acknowledge them when served papers by Moorcock's lawyer
"But the Iron Crutain!"
Borders in the Eastern Bloc were pretty porous toward the end of the Cold War, and in 1985 Sapkowski was working for a company that was translating Elric into Polish. The Witcher came around in 1987. What a cowinky-kurwa-dink.
"He's inspired, not plagiarized!"
The Conjunction of the Spheres being in both is the slam-dunk refutation of this.
"Nothing new under the sun!"
He could at least have changed Geralt's appearance or temperament.
"Muh Slavic mythology!"
What makes the fairy tales of Snow Mexicans special again?
Edit: I don't give a shit either way on this. I'm just sick of simpering Witcher fanboys gushing about "MuH SLaVShEEiT" and "mUh GrAyTeSt ArpayGay Evuhhh!" STFU, Redditard bugmen, it's not special.