The Trial
By Franz Kafka
By Franz Kafka
By Franz Kafka
By Franz Kafka
By Franz Kafka
Introduction by George Steiner
Translated by Willa Muir and Edwin Muir
By Franz Kafka
Introduction by George Steiner
Translated by Willa Muir and Edwin Muir
By Franz Kafka
By Franz Kafka
Part of The Schocken Kafka Library
Part of Everyman's Library Contemporary Classics Series
Part of The Schocken Kafka Library
Category: Literary Fiction
Category: Literary Fiction
Category: Classic Fiction | Literary Fiction
Category: Literary Fiction
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$16.00
May 25, 1999 | ISBN 9780805209990
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$17.00
Mar 28, 1995 | ISBN 9780805210408
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$26.00
Jun 30, 1992 | ISBN 9780679409946
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Oct 03, 2012 | ISBN 9780307829443
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Praise
“Kafka’s ‘legalese’ is alchemically fused with a prose of great verve and intense readability.”
—James Rolleston, professor of Germanic languages and literatures, Duke University
“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
Praise for The Castle:
translated by Mark Harman from the restored text
“The new Schocken edition of The Castle represents a major and long-awaited event in English- language publishing. It is a wonderful piece of news for all Kafka readers who, for more than half a century, have had to rely on flawed, superannuated editions. Mark Harman is to be commended for his success in capturing the fresh, fluid, almost breathless style of Kafka’s original manuscript.”
—Mark M. Anderson, Columbia University
“Semantically accurate to an admirable degree, faithful to Kafka’s nuances, responsive to the tempo of his sentences and to the larger music of his paragraph construction. For the general reader or for the student, it will be the translation of preference for some time to come.”
—J. M. Coetzee, The New York Review of Books
“There is a great deal to applaud in Harman’s translation. It gives us a much better sense of Kafka’s uncompromising and disturbing originality as a prose master than we have heretofore had in English.”
—Robert Alter, The New Republic
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
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