The Trial by Franz Kafka

The Trial (Arcturus Silhouette Classics) (Franz Kafka) (Schocken classics) (Best Franz Kafka Books, #1) (Illustrated Classics (Sterling)) (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Serie) (Penguin audiobooks) (Classic Books Library) (Cathedral Classics) (Landmarks S.) (Vintage classics) (Graphic Freud) (Schocken Kafka Library) (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature) (Dover Thrift Editions) (Penguin twentieth century classics) (Classic Franz Kafka - English Translation) (Picador Books) (Arcturus Classics)

by Franz Kafka

"Someone must have been slandering Joseph K, because one morning, without having done anything wrong, he was suddenly arrested." """The Trial" is a graphic adaptation of Franz Kafka's famous novel, illustrated by one of France's leading graphic artists, Chantal Montellier. Montellier brilliantly captures both the menace and the humor of Kafka's utterly unique masterwork. This darkly humorous tale follows Joseph K, who is arrested one morning for unexplained reasons and forced to struggle against an absurd judicial process. K finds himself thrown from one disorientating encounter to the next as he becomes increasingly desperate to prove his innocence in the face of unknown charges. In its stark portrayal of an authoritarian bureaucracy trampling over the lives of its estranged citizens, "The Trial" is as relevant today as ever.

Reviewed by clq on

4 of 5 stars

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The Trial really has the feel of the kind of nightmare you'd have if you were to eat a very large meal and then fall asleep while reading about Alice's Adventures in Wonderland in the midst of revising for a law exam… But it's like a nightmare in a good way… I think.

Considering how much I thought I knew about the general gist of this book, and how much it is referenced all over the place, I was surprised at how surprising I found it. I'd expected it to be much more of a parody, making fun of "the system", bureaucracy, and common-sense defying rules in a comic, absurdist way. Instead it turned out to be rather dark satire. It is funny at times, but only through absurdity. It is lighthearted at times, but never in a way which inspires any confidence at all in the lightheartedness being justified. Instead the occasional good mood and optimism in the main character becomes frustrating when contrasted with the hopelessness we sense that he should be feeling.

And the hopelessness, while overwhelming, isn't even obvious - it's gradually revealed in a really brilliant way. Not through events of explicit hopelessness, but through events that just fail to deliver any real hope. Ever. It's eerily unsettling.

This is a book that everyone should read. There is no excuse not to. It's short, it's a classic, and it's really well done. I'm not sure I can claim to have enjoyed it, but enjoyment is obviously not what this book is going for. It's a fantastic and really vivid portrayal of hopelessness and helplessness with an underlying theme of what happens when you're caught up in a system with no care for or awareness of anything but preserving itself. And if you haven't read this book, but feel that you pretty much know what it's like, you might well be in for a surprise. I know I was.

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  • Started reading
  • 13 May, 2017: Finished reading
  • 13 May, 2017: Reviewed