
The Castle
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Narrado por:
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Allan Corduner
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De:
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Franz Kafka
A land-surveyor, known only as K., arrives at a small village permanently covered in snow and dominated by a castle to which access seems permanently denied. K.'s attempts to discover why he has been called constantly run up against the peasant villagers, who are in thrall to the absurd bureaucracy that keeps the castle shut, and the rigid hierarchy of power among the self-serving bureaucrats themselves. But in this strange wilderness, there is passion, tenderness and considerable humour. Darkly bizarre, this complex book was the last novel by one of the 20th century's greatest and most influential writers.
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everyone probably knows this manuscript was unfinished; i did not
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I personally enjoyed The Trial more, but I'm not sure if that's because it had an ending. It's a shame The Castle cut off so abruptly.
A weird experience
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Would you recommend this book to a friend? Why or why not?
only if my friend wanted to be able to say "I've read Kafka" which is exactly why I finished this nonsensical book. If you like reading/listening to people argue the same point from 3-4 different positions with each other for no reason other than to hear themselves think then this is your book.Would you recommend The Castle to your friends? Why or why not?
noWhich character – as performed by Allan Corduner – was your favorite?
noneIf this book were a movie would you go see it?
if it were 100 degrees outside and I didn't have air conditioning and I needed a place to take a nap I would buy a ticket to the show and have a nice cool nap.Any additional comments?
waste your credit if you want toPsycobabble
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2. Excellent narrator.
3. I kept listening in the hope that the hero will put order to everything, sadly, the book never ends. The theme is clear...
4. Something that did bother me was that all characters, so it seems, possessed the same level of intellect while arguing something. You don't feel the diversity between them in this sense.
5. I liked the book a lot and that is the bottom line.
Felt like wondering in a Salvador Dali picture
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As for this David Whiting translation, I think it is available only in this audio book format. The Muir translation is supposed to be smoother and more poetic than Kafka’s original. The more recent Breon Mitchell’s is said to be most literal, but can be somewhat awkward. I think Whiting’s is somewhere in the middle. Compare these.
German: Lange stand K. auf der Holzbruecke, die von der Landstrasse zum Dorf fuehrte, und blickte in die scheinbare Leere empor.
Breon Mitchell: K. stood a long time on the wooden bridge that leads from the main road to the village, gazing upward into the seeming emptiness.
David Whiting (this audio book): For a long time K. stood on the wooden bridge that led from the country road to the village looking up into the apparent void.
Edwin Muir: On the wooden bridge leading from the main road to the village, K. stood for a long time gazing into the illusory emptiness above him.
The book itself I think is the greatest among Kafka’s works, or at least most Kafkaesque in both substance and technique. (Sorry. Too involved to back that up.) But there are technical imperfections such as the excessive use of long speeches and internal reflections. More substantively, the book can seem poorly motivated in places, even if you grant that one’s standing with the castle is the paramount concern for every character. I have a problem with the two assistants, who look like unfortunate props that somehow got in and obliged the author to use them.
This novel, I am told, like many others by the author, is the first draft with minimal corrections. It is doubtful the piece would have retained much of the current form had he reworked it. Unfortunate that he didn’t get to do it; not as if that went against his grain necessarily; he did publish stories in his life time (I am assuming he polished those). Unedited though, the piece obviously lets you into the author’s mind the way no polished work can.
Some of my favorite passage of this book are the opening scene (until K. falls asleep), the bath day scene with the wan “girl from the castle,” the trek though snow and the arrival at Barnabas’s parental home, interview with Momus (from courtyard to outdoors again), the chance meeting with Frieda in Herrenhof after the breakup.
Olga’s long explanations about Amalia seem extremely artificial and strained to me, something I think Kafka would have dismantled had he come back to it.
A masculine and coquettish reading
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beautifully narrated fever dream
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Tedious at best
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Both protagonist and reader are made to endure a seemingly endless row of minor difficulties in return for questionable rewards. In this manner, the book doesn't serve much of a narrative but instead tries to convey a variety of themes – in particular fatigue.
Don't come looking for a thrilling story and don't expect any deep, philosophical argumentation either. Read this book only if you can bear a deep sense of futility or thoroughly enjoy gossip and pettiness.
A miserable ordeal
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