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Kafka Illustrated by Robert Crumb
February 2nd, 2010 by Aldouspi

3:4 Portrait crop of Franz Kafka
Image via Wikipedia

Product Description
This brief but inclusive biography of Franz Kafka and summary of many of his works, all illustrated by Robert Crumb, helps us understand the essence of Kafka and provide insight beyond the cliche “Kafkaesque.” “What do I have in common with the Jews? I don’t even have anything in common with myself.” Nothing could better express the essence of Franz Kafka, a man described by his friends as living behind a “glass wall.” Kafka wrote in the tradition of… More >>

Kafka

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4 Responses  
  • Leonard Friedland writes:
    February 2nd, 20103:26 amat

    R. Crumb and Charles Bukowski, now Crumb and Kafka. The drawings illuminate the text in a way that Kafka would have loved. I will never see Kafka again, except through Crumb’s vision.

    If you like Crumb, or if you like Kafka, find this book.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  • John Blue writes:
    February 2nd, 20104:38 amat

    This is an amazing book about Kafka. I have read some Kafka, but never in a million years would I have bought a biography of Kafka–unless I had been intrigued by the idea of it being in “graphic novel” format. David Mairowitz does a superb job of simply and clearly illustrating Kafka as a human being and dissecting Kafka’s writing with great reverence for the work. As for Robert Crumb, it would be hard to imagine a better artist to illustrate a book about Kafka. Perhaps it is due to Crumb’s very public neuroticism and career built on drawing the nebbish that you feel an instant sense of the “rightness” of the artistic depictions in this book.

    It is a delightful, often humorous, and informative read. You would be hard pressed to find a less painful way to become more familiar with the world and work of Franz Kafka. I would highly recommend this book for any student assigned to read Kafka, or for anyone who has read something of Kafka and would like a better sense of his origins and influences. It is somehow scholarly and delightful all at the same time.

    Rating: 5 / 5

  • Anonymous writes:
    February 2nd, 20106:22 amat

    Michael Sidlofsky

    Kafka scholar David Mairowitz and underground comics artist Robert Crumb team up to provide a fascinating window into Franz Kafka’s brilliantly troubled mind. Mairowitz’s text provides historical context and biographical information, including valuable insight into the Jewish folkloric roots of Kafka’s fiction. Crumb’s characteristically graphic illustrations highlight the horrific and humorous elements within Kafka’s work. Together, the author and illustrator provide summaries of K’s best-known short stories and novels, encouraging the reader to delve into the originals. The book’s only flaw lies in Mairowitz’s unfortunately condescending attitude towards Kafka scholars and fans.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  • Kerry Walters writes:
    February 2nd, 20107:55 amat

    Kafka was a complex man whose genius is inseparable from his huge neuroses. So is Robert Crumb. Put the two together, as this book does, and the upshot is a book in which the distinction between author Crumb and subject Kafka tends to dissolve. The book is just as much about the one as the other. It’s no mistake that Crumb is drawn (sorry for the bad pun) to Kafka.

    At one level, the book is a primer on the life and work of Franz Kafka, with Crumb lavishly illustrating David Zane Mairowitz’s text (warning: the text is strangely loaded with typos). The highlights of Kafka’s life, including his stormy relationship with his father, his alienation from Prague, the city in which he spent most of his life, his difficulties with sexual intimacy, his self-loathing, his work at an insurance agency, and his struggle with tuberculosis, are all chronicled. Moreover, synapses of some of his best work–“The Judgment,” “The Metamorphosis,” “The Burrow,” “In the Penal Colony,” “A Hunger Artist,” “Letter to His Father,” The Trial, The Castle, and Amerika–are provided. Someone who knows nothing or little about Kafka will get a good orientation from reading this book.

    But it’s Crumb’s pen-and-ink illustrations that make the book. They’re eerie, dark, and at times actually frightening: perfect glimpses of Kafka’s demons as well as Crumb’s. In fact, Crumb and Kafka share many of the same demons: an intense need for comfort by women, but a deep-seated hostility to them; an equally intense need for public approval, coupled with an intense contempt for the crowd; a fascination with the usually unnoticed weirdness of the ordinary; a competing attraction and repulsion to the artistic, bohemian crowd; seething but repressed sexuality; a periodic yearning to disappear, to be punished, to be redeemed and reborn through suffering; an alternately bewildered and enraged dislike of Nietzschean proportions of the way in which popular culture cheapens existence (Crumb & Mairowitz’s take on touristy Prague, pp. 174-75, is priceless); and a need to confess some of their darkest secrets, through their art, to the very public they disdain. In many ways, both Crumb and Kafka are hunger artists: they refuse to partake of the status quo not necessarily because they’re ascetics, but simply because they don’t find anything in it that whets their appetites. In gazing at Crumb’s brilliant illustrations of Kafka, one can’t help but think that this work, like so much of what Crumb does, is autobiographical.

    Is it intentionally so? Does Crumb understand the deep connection between himself and Kafka? Is the book intended, at least on one level, as a gag: a book about Crumbka? I dunno, although I suspect that Crumb knows exactly what he’s doing. But what I do know is that Kafka is about more than just Kafka. And that’s what makes doubly intriguing.
    Rating: 5 / 5


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