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The Unhappiness of Being a Single Man

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
New translations of the best stories by the one of the twentieth century's greatest and most influential writers
Kafka, whose name has generated an adjective, is one of the best loved writers of the twentieth century. Known for his dark, enigmatic stories, for the absurd nightmares he depicts, his extraordinary imaginative depth is clear in stories from 'A Hunger Artist' to 'The Verdict'.
But Kafka also wrote fizzingly funny, fresh stories, and The Unhappiness of Being a Single Man contains all the aspects of this genius: the wit and the grit; the horror and the humour; the longing and the laughing. They range from bizarre, two-sentence stories about Don Quixote to the famous brutal depiction of violence and justice that is 'In the Penal Colony'.
In a nimble new translation by the acclaimed Alexander Starritt, this collection of Kafka's essential stories shows the genius at his very best.
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    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2019
      Anthology of freshly translated stories by the acerbic master of early continental modernism.Kafka (1883-1924) did not live long, and the years he did have were filled with angst that he put into the service of art. He is best known for strange, gloomy stories of, say, an unfortunate young man who turns into a beetle or another unfortunate if somewhat older man caught up in a grinding legal system that makes Bleak House look like summer camp. Yet Kafka had a playful side, as this little anthology of "essential stories" reveals early on with a small, little-known piece called "Poseidon," in which Kafka--himself a lawyer in an insurance firm--imagines the Greek god of the sea as a beleaguered accountant annoyed at the presupposition that he, as a deity, was free to do as he pleased: "The only interruption to this monotony were occasional visits to Jupiter, visits, by the way, from which he usually returned in a fury." The one-page title story is of a piece, reporting that the putative freedom of a bachelor really means loneliness: "both today and in the future you'll actually be standing there yourself, with a body and a real head, as well as a forehead, which you can use your hand to slap." Some of the better-known stories are here, including the long piece "In the Penal Colony," which anticipates the tortures and bureaucratic horrors of the 20th century ("I want to describe the machine before I start the process," the just-following-orders jailer blandly explains). Throughout, reading and rereading these stories, one is reminded of how timely Kafka is: He writes of "European attitudes" that give way to nationalist clashes and tribalism ("Why is the chief engineer a Romanian?" grouses an engine-room denizen who, as a German, imagines himself superior) and always of the inhumanity that lurks just below the thin veneer of civilization.A welcome distillation of Kafka's short fiction, essential indeed.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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