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The Metamorphosis

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
0 of 1 copy available

It is indeed delightful to see how the seasoned writers, use a situation to explain the complexities of human emotions like sacrifice, loneliness and disillusionment. The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka comes a realization that one goes through so much as they feel indebted to their family that come what may they must provide for them. But is all that really needed? Is one ever so indispensable in life that he is obliged to go through a lifetime of suffering simply to provide for one's family? This great read is a liberating experience for all those who feel shackled by the duties of life and reaffirms the faith in one's own wellbeing and happiness.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 22, 2003
      Kuper has adapted short works by Kafka into comics before, but here he tackles the most famous one of all: the jet-black comedy that ensues after the luckless Gregor Samsa turns into a gigantic bug. The story loses a bit in translation (and the typeset text looks awkward in the context of Kuper's distinctly handmade drawings). A lot of the humor in the original comes from the way Kafka plays the story's absurdities absolutely deadpan, and the visuals oversell the joke, especially since Kuper draws all the human characters as broad caricatures. Even so, he works up a suitably creepy frisson, mostly thanks to his drawing style. Executed on scratchboard, it's a jittery, woodcut-inspired mass of sharp angles that owes a debt to both Frans Masereel (a Belgian woodcut artist who worked around Kafka's time) and MAD magazine's Will Elder. The knotty walls and floors of the Samsas' house look like they're about to dissolve into dust. In the book's best moments, Kuper lets his unerring design sense and command of visual shorthand carry the story. The jagged forms on the huge insect's belly are mirrored by folds in business clothes; thinking about the debt his parents owe his employer, Gregor imagines his insectoid body turning into money slipping through an hourglass. Every thing and person in this Metamorphosis seems silhouetted and carved, an effect that meshes neatly with Kafka's sense of nightmarish unreality.

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  • OverDrive Read
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Languages

  • English

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