“When you think Franz Kafka, what comes to mind? Mitteleuropean gloom, perhaps… What you don’t think of is standup comedy.” Two young comedians are staging a new version of Kafka’s The Trial to hit the London stage next month.
Kafka as Comedy
Banned Books Week
Comic of the Week: Over at Electric Lit, check out Grant Snider’s comic on why we ban books. We look at The Lorax and other dangerous books in honor of Banned Books Week.
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Whose Line Is It Anyway?
Having trouble falling asleep at night?
Madhu Kaza, a "writer, artist and educator," has a possible solution for you. She'll come into your home 15 minutes before bedtime and sit in a chair beside your bed and read to you from your favorite books until you fall asleep. Then she'll let herself out and lock the door behind her. The free service is called Here Is Where We Meet, the title of a 2005 novel by John Berger. The only requirement is that you fill out a short questionnaire and make an appointment --- and get ready to say goodbye to the sheep and the warm milk.
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RIP Umberto Eco
Umberto Eco, Italian semiotician and author of works such as Theory of Semiotics and The Name of the Rose, has died at 84. His most famous work, The Name of the Rose, was adapted in a film starring Sean Connery and Christian Slater. Reflect on his life by revisiting Hillary Kelly's review of Confessions of a Young Novelist.
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Reading Scores Fall
SAT reading scores have fallen to their lowest level on record.
Didn’t DFW try to teach his students that Kafka is funny?
Franz is hilarious, if you know what to look for. He’s the comic father of 75% of the comedians today, whether their mothers know it or not. Although The Castle is funnier than The Trial. But don’t wait for the punchline.