Review – Kafka
Posted on February 5th, 2010
Kafka by Robert Crumb and David Zane Mairowitz
Fantagraphics Books
978-1-56097-806-0
Trade Paperback
Franz Kafka said, “What do I have in common with the Jews? I don’t even have anything in common with myself.” This enigmatic expression of estrangement and singularity begins to capture the essence of one of the world’s most fascinating authors.
And now, in a remarkable new book from Fantagraphics, readers can experience in a very special way a fascinating—“Kafkaesque”—and compact critical biography of the canonical German-speaking Prague author.
Fully illustrated in black-and-white drawings by renowned cartoonist Robert Crumb, David Zane Mairowitz’s text explores Kafka life and works in a manner that readers will find in no other Kafka study. Yes, readers can find plenty of other books that talk about Kafka’s life. And, yes, readers can also find plenty of critical studies of Kafka’s works (i.e., Amerika, The Castle, Hunger Artist, The Judgment, Metamorphosis, The Penal Colony, The Trial, and others). But here, in this slender 176 page volume from Fantagraphics, a top-notch graphic novel and comics publisher, readers get a special, unique bonus: Robert Crumb’s illustrations. Through Crumb’s seductively sinister artwork, readers will have a dark, powerful view into the world of self-loathing and alienation that is part-and-parcel of Kafka’s fictional and biographical existence.
This book is an absolute treasure for Kafka readers. While it is perfect as an introduction to Kafka studies and essential as a healthy antidote to the thousands of so-called scholarly books and articles written about Kafka, Crumb’s and Mairowitz’s entertaining and informative book makes Kafka “come alive” in a very special way.
Tags: Absolute Treasure, Alienation, Critical Biography, Critical Studies, David Zane Mairowitz, Estrangement, Fantagraphics Books, Franz Kafka, Graphic Novel, Hunger Artist, Informative Book, Metamorphosis, Page Volume, Penal Colony, Renowned Cartoonist, Robert Crumb, Scholarly Books, Self Loathing, Singularity, Zane
Filed under News and Reviews |
Comments are closed.