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    The Trial

    3.8 56

    by Franz Kafka


    Hardcover

    $14.99
    $14.99

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

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    • ISBN-13: 9781613829288
    • Publisher: Simon & Brown
    • Publication date: 11/04/2010
    • Pages: 198
    • Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.63(d)

    Franz Kafka was born in 1883 in Prague, where he lived most of his life. During his lifetime, he published only a few short stories, including “The Metamorphosis,” “The Judgment,” and “The Stoker.” He died in 1924, before completing any of his full-length novels. At the end of his life, Kafka asked his lifelong friend and literary executor Max Brod to burn all his unpublished work. Brod overrode those wishes.

    Brief Biography

    Date of Birth:
    July 3, 1883
    Date of Death:
    June 3, 1924
    Place of Birth:
    Prague, Austria-Hungary
    Place of Death:
    Vienna, Austria
    Education:
    German elementary and secondary schools. Graduated from German Charles-Ferdinand University of Prague.
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    The Trial (German: Der Process) is a novel by Franz Kafka about a character named Josef K., who awakens one morning and, for reasons never revealed, is arrested and prosecuted for an unspecified crime.

    According to Kafka's friend Max Brod, the author never finished the novel and wrote in his will that it was to be destroyed. After his death, Brod went against Kafka's wishes and edited The Trial into what he felt was a coherent novel and had it published in 1925.

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    From the Publisher
    ‘[I]t seemed as though the shame was to outlive him.’ With these words The Trial ends. Kafka’s shame then is no more personal than the life and thought which govern it and which he describes thus: ‘He does not live for the sake of his own life, he does not think for the sake of his own thought. He feels as though he were living and thinking under the constraint of a family . . . Because of this unknown family . . . he cannot be released.’”
    —Walter Benjamin
     
    “Breon Mitchell’s translation is an accomplishment of the highest order that will honor Kafka far into the twenty-first century.”
    —Walter Abish, author of How German Is It
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