Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
#Kafka
review
Schwifty
The Complete Stories | Franz Kafka
post image
Mehso-so

To be sure, I adore Kafka, but mostly in novel form such as The Castle, Amerika and so on. While I can appreciate some of the stories in this volume, including the famous Metamorphosis and dark, comedic, absurd takes such as Description of a Struggle and In the Penal Colony, I admittedly did not connect to much of the volume; many of the stories meander on like H.P. Lovecraft, but pretending to be a dog or a mole. Not bad. Not amazing.

review
AnishaInkspill
A Hunger Artist | Franz Kafka
Pickpick

A Hunger-Artist: Four Stories

I‘m left speechless, my first response is the four stories that make this mini collection are sad as they are beautiful in how they each show the human condition.

The four stories are: First Sorrow; Little Women; A Hunger-Artist; and Josefine the singer, or the Mouse People

#Fiction #books #readaway2024 #eBook

review
BiblioLitten
Kafka and the Doll | Larissa Theule
post image
Pickpick

A beautiful story, and lovely illustrations. Based on real events in Franz Kafka‘s life.
I love picture books!

34 likes1 stack add
quote
bookwyrm7
post image

"And so long as you say" one" instead of "I", there's nothing in it and one can easily tell the story; but as soon as you admit to yourself that it is you yourself, you feel as though transfixed and are horrified.", In the short story" Wedding Preparations in the Country", by Franz Kafka.
One of the many things I'm loving about this anthology is getting to know Kafka's humour a bit better.

review
i.z.booknook
post image
Pickpick

This edition contained Metamorphosis, as well as In the Penal Colony and The Judgement: A Story for F. I think all were brilliant and the famous dissatisfaction of conventional society comes across strongly in all. Metamorphosis was a lot sadder than I anticipated; the actions of his family contrasted with Gregor‘s innocent inner monologue conjures feelings of injustice and unfairness. (Cont in comments 👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻)

i.z.booknook (1) It also has one of the best opening lines of a story, ever, which also perfectly sums up the plot: a traveling salesman who suddenly turns into a cockroach. In the Penal Colony I found extremely interesting and very dark and gory. A traveller is given a tour and demonstration of an out-dated and controversial but historically significant mode of execution. 9mo
i.z.booknook (2) A shockingly inventive and gruesome contraption Kafka came up with, it reminded me a little of The Trial, as the condemned doesn‘t know why they are condemned. Once again, powerful feelings of injustice and corruption seep from the pages. The Judgement I was a little ambivalent about but it was very quick and still rather thoughtful. Another interesting familial relationship. 9mo
27 likes2 comments
blurb
dabbe
post image
thegreensofa One of my most favourite books! 🪳😄 10mo
Eggs 🖤🕷️🖤 10mo
dabbe @thegreensofa It scared the pants off me! 🤩😱😃 10mo
dabbe @Eggs 💜🩶💜 10mo
57 likes4 comments
review
anushareflects
America | Franz Kafka
post image
Pickpick

Blew through this wild ride with Karl Rossman in America - a lighter novel by Kafka. But I have to say - Kafka simply decided to not finish writing this book AND left it at a major cliffhanger. Why???? Ahhh the anxiety is going to kill me. But fantastic writing in the first 7 chapters. If you‘re ok with being ghosted by Kafka, this is a fun one.

blurb
anushareflects
America | Franz Kafka
post image

I‘ve been struggling to find good fiction that satisfies my current mood lately, picked up Kafka‘s America yesterday. Here‘s hoping it pulls me out of this fiction slump! (PS I really enjoy Kafka‘s writing)

review
suvata
The Trial | Franz Kafka
post image
Pickpick

• 2nd read

Josef K. is unexpectedly arrested on the morning of his 30th birthday. The agents who arrest him are unidentified, the agency they work for is unspecified, and the nature of his crime is never revealed to him. When he is released, he is told to await further instruction. So begins the manic and emotionless trial of a man beholden to the whims of an unknown force, and his painstaking attempts to find a way out of this existential maze.