Sunday, September 24, 2023

The Complete Kafka

Public Domain


1. Franz Kafka: A Biography by Max Brod

https://songsofinnocenceampexperience.blogspot.com/2023/09/ddr-franz-kafka-biography-by-max-brod.html


2. The Frozen Sea: A Study of Franz Kafka by Charles Neider

https://songsofinnocenceampexperience.blogspot.com/2023/09/ddr-frozen-sea-study-of-franz-kafka-by.html


3. Franz Kafka, A Writer's Life by Joachim Unseld

https://songsofinnocenceampexperience.blogspot.com/2023/09/ddr-franz-kafka-writers-life-by-joachim.html


4. Franz Kafka: The Complete Stories

https://songsofinnocenceampexperience.blogspot.com/2023/10/ddr-franz-kafka-complete-stories.html


5. Amerika: The Missing Person 

https://songsofinnocenceampexperience.blogspot.com/2023/10/ddr-amerika-missing-person-by-franz.html

And I'm sorry to say that that is where my Quest for the Complete Kafka ended. Between the fulsome praise of Max Brod, the ridiculous "interpretations" of Charles Neider, the many bad stories in The Complete Stories, and the boredom I found in Amerika, I decided not to punish myself by continuing with this commitment. I loved Kafka when I was young, and there are still a few stories I love, but I don't have enough reading years left to me to devote any more time to him. Sorry, Franz. Thanks for all the 🐟.



DDR: Franz Kafka, A Writer's Life by Joachim Unseld



I guess we'll see if third time IS the charm. 

I enjoyed Max Brod's biography of Kafka, but it didn't give me the details I wanted to construct a chronological bibliography of Kafka's works, which was my main goal. I didn't enjoy Neider's book at all, and it added nothing to Brod's book...though it did convince me that Neider was a very sick little puppy.

So now I'll see what Joachim Unseld has to say. The table of contents gives me hope, as it seems to be structured around Kafka's works.

Crossing fingers.

Shaking off the Neider.

Deep breath. Hold.

Plunge in, ax in hand.

Day 1 (DDRD 2,154) September 24, 2023

Read to page 33.

This is a big one: 394 pages. But UT looks like its what I've been hoping to find. Here's what I have in the way of A Complete & Chronological Bibliography of the Works of Franz Kafka so far:


"Heaven in Narrow Sreets" 1906 LOST

"Meditation" March 1908

"Conversation With the Supplicant" and "Conversation With the Drunken Man" May 1909

"The Aeroplanes at Brescia" September 29, 1909

"The Powder Puff. A Lady's Breviary" 1909 (Review)

"A Novel About Youth" 1910 (Review)

"Meditations" 1910? Collects 4 previously published pieces plus "Reflections for Gentlemen-Jockeys"

"A Departed Journal" 1911 (Memorial Address)


Not a bad start, eh? And I'm already feeling my love for Kafka reigniting...despite the thorough piss-drowning Neider gave those twigs.



Day 2 (DDRD 2,155) September 25, 2023

Read to page 70.

"He tried to clarify his existence through literature...." (54)

Looks like this book is exACTly what I was looking for with respect to constructing a Complete Chronological Bibliography of the Kafka Oeuvre. I guess the third time IS the charm after all...though I wish the second try hadn't been that awful Neider book. ANYway, I've decided to shove the Still Under Construction Bibliography to the bottom of the page so that I don't have to go back and assemble the pieces later. So there's that.

Speaking of books, here's Kafka's first--available for a mere $5,875. 





Day 3 (DDRD 2,156) September 26, 2023

Read to page 100.

"Even if no salvation should come, I want to be worthy enough of it at every moment." (74)

Reference the fulsome praise of Max Brod and others, Kafka writes in his diary, "Valueless in their exaggerated praise, valueless in their comments, and explicable only as a sign of misguided fruendship." (96) 

I'm enjoying this book. Its by far the best of the three Kafka biographies I've read. But for some reason while reading today I thought about abandoning my Kafka Project. In part its because the bibliography is so confusing. He held back from publishing so much...and destroyed or didn't publish so many pieces...that it just began to feel like an impossible task. Of course, only my OCDness makes me feel that I have to read every sentence Kafka wrote. His published works only total about 350 pages (with the raven), which I could knock out in two weeks.

Just sayin', sir.


Day 4 (DDRD 2,157) September 27, 2023

Read to page 130.

Had a thought whilst reading this morning: would Kafka have published anything without Max Brod? It seems quite possible that he would not have. Not only did Brod cajole constantly, he also contacted publishers, used his influence as a published author to get them interested in Kafka, and in general was Kafka's cheering squad. 

Kafka was anxious to have "The Judgment," "The Stoker," and "The Metamorphosis" published together under the title of The Sons. He noted that there was a "secret" connection between these stories.


I don't know how "complete" this Complete is, given the nature of the beast, but at very least its a good starting point, I suppose. Though I did just try to identify the pieces in my WORK IN PROGRESS Bibliography, and only found two of those pieces in The Complete, so that doesn't seem like a good sign.


Day 5 (DDRD 2,158) September 28, 2023

Read to page 160.



Day 6 (DDRD 2,159) September 29, 2023

Read to page 190.

So...Kafka gets an "invitation" to read "In the Penal Colony" in Munich. " " because it turns out to have been set up by Max Brod, who said he'd only read if Kafka could come with him...and then Brod couldn't come. So Kafka goes and reads to an audience of 50-ish. It doesn't go well. Three women faint, and a newspaper review identifies Kafka as a "sensualist of terror."



Day 7 (DDRD 2,160) September 30, 2023

Read to page 220.

Kafka gets a letter from his publisher telling him Meditation has sold 102 copies in 1916 - 1917. Kafka's thought on this? "...amazingly high sale...." (191) Which makes me think of Krapp's Last Tape ("Getting known!")



Day 8 (DDRD 2,161) October 1, 2023

Read to page 250.



Day 9 (DDRD 2,162) October 2, 2023

Read to page 280.



Day 10 (DDRD 2,163) October 3, 2023

Read to page 310.

Which puts me into the Notes. Wish that I'd read them as I went, since its not much fun to plow through 70 pages of Notes, but that's very awkward with Internet Archive books (which you can't bookmark), so ill just put my head down and keep my legs churning. 

Unseld refers to Kafka publishing seven books during his lifetime on page 293. I'm sorry to say that I can only identify five of those books. Hmmmm.



Day 11 (DDRD 2,164) October 4, 2023

Read to page 340. Wanted to get farther and might later, but page after page of notes is not all that much fun.

With a little help from a Note & Wikipedia, I think I've figured out the six books published by Wolff during Kafka's lifetime. I've put information vis-a-vis this in red in the bibliography below. I've no idea what the 7th one (above) was, though.

341 to 366: 25 pages of notes to go.

😶

And then 394 - 367 = 27 more pages of Other Stuff.


P.S. Read to page 352. Might be able to finish this book tomorrow, then.



Day 12 (DDRD 2,165) October 5, 2023

Read to page 394, The End

Note 40 mentions a 1926 German translation of Swann's Way, about which a critic said, "It is approximately like having Debussy rearranged for the harmonica."

This was without a doubt the best of the three Kafka "biographies" I read...but I'm still left feeling unsatisfied and a bit confused. Even with careful attention to the text I'm not confident that I have a goid version of Kafka's Complete Bibliography. Which makes me less eager to jump unto reading Kafka, I'm sorry to sat, but I think that's what I'll do tomorrow anyway.

Unless I get a better idea.










Complete Chronological Bibliography of the Kafka Oeuvre

"Heaven in Narrow Sreets" 1906 LOST

"Meditation" March 1908

"Conversation With the Supplicant" and "Conversation With the Drunken Man" May 1909

"The Aeroplanes at Brescia" September 29, 1909

"The Powder Puff. A Lady's Breviary" 1909 (Review)

"A Novel About Youth" 1910 (Review)

"Meditations" 1910? Collects 4 previously published pieces plus "Reflections for Gentlemen-Jockeys" 

"A Departed Journal" 1911 (Memorial Address)

"The First Chapter of the Book 'Richard and Samuel' - The First Long Train Trip (Prague-Zurich) June 1912

" Great Noise" October 1912

Meditation (1912) This first book collection is described as 31 manuscript pages. Hence the need for a very large font, which made it 99 pages (as noted previously). (1) 

Rowohlt Verlag 1912


"Great Noise" 1912

"Children on A Country Road" (from Meditation) 1912 

"The Judgment" 1912 (4?) Kurt Wolff 1916

"The Stoker" April 1913 (2) Kurt Wolff 1913

"Before the Law" 1915

"The Metamorphosis" October 1915 and November 1915 (3) Kurt Wolff 1915

"A Dream" 1916

"Jackals and Arabs" & "A Report to the Academy" 1917

"The New Advocate" 1917

"The Fratricide" 1917

"The Murder" 1918 (early version of "The Fratricide")

"A Country Doctor" 1918 (6) Kurt Wolff 1919

"An Imperial Message" 1919

"In the Penal Colony" 1919 (5) Kurt Wolff 1919

"The Cares of A Family Man" 1919

"An Old Manuscript" 1921

"In the Gallery" 1921 (excerpt from "A Country Doctor")

"Unmasking of A Confidence Trickster" September 1921

"The Bucket Rider" December 1921

"First Sorrow" Fall 1922

"A Hunger Artist" October 1922

"Josephine" April 1924

"A Little Woman" April 1924
























DDR Day 1 to 1,000: 13,449 pages read, 13.45 Average Pages Per Day
A History of Philosophy Volumes I - XI
History of Civilization in England Volumes I - III
Miscellaneous and Posthumous Works of Henry Thomas Buckle Volumes I - III
Civilization and Capitalism, 16th - 18th Century Volumes I - III
The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip IIl Volumes I - III
This Happened In My Presence: Moriscos, Old Christians, and the Spanish Inquisition in the Town of Deza, 1569-1611
The Stolen Village: Baltimore and the Barbary Pirates
Peat and Peat Cutting
+
DDR Day 1,001 to Day 2,000:
(1) Leviathan 63 days, 729 pages
(2) Stalingrad 27 days, 982 pages
(3) Life and Fate 26 days, 880 pages
(4) The Second World War 34 + 32 + 40 + 43 + 31 + 32 days = 212 days, 4,379 pages
(5) Baron Wenckheim's Homecoming 10 days, 572 pages
(6) The Great Bridge 25 days, 636 pages
(7) The Path Between the Seas 29 days, 698 pages
(8) Blake: Prophet Against Empire, 23 days, 523 pages
(9) Jerusalem 61 days, 1,266 pages
(10) Voice of the Fire 9 days, 320 pages
(11) The Fountainhead 15 days, 720 pages
(12) The Pacific Trilogy: Pacific Crucible 23 days, 640 pages
(13) The Pacific Trilogy: The Conquering Tide 28 days, 656 pages
(14) The Pacific Trilogy: Twilight of the Gods 31 days, 944 pages
(15) Jazz: Its Evolution and Essence 13 days, 304 pages
(16) Toward Jazz 18 days, 224 pages
(17) The Worlds of Jazz 13 days, 279 pages
(18) To Be or Not...to Bop 14 days, 571 pages
(19) Kind of Blue 4 days, 224 pages
(20) Kind of Blue: Miles Davis and his Masterpiece: 5 days, 256 pages
(21) Miles: The Autobiography 16 days, 445 pages
(21) A Love Supreme: The Story of John Coltrane's Signature Album: 8 days, 287 pages
(22) Ascension: John Coltrane and His Quest 8 days, 304 pages
(23) Living With Music: Ralph Ellison's Jazz Writings 11 days 325 pages
(24) The Pickwick Papers 28 days, 983 pages
(25) Oliver Twist 16 days, 542 pages
(26) Nicholas Nickleby 27 days, 1,045 pages
(27) The Old Curiosity Shop 22 days, 753 pages
(28) Barnaby Rudge 24 days, 866 pages
(29) Master Humprhey's Clock 4 days, 145 pages
(30) Martin Chuzzlewit 32 days, 1,045 pages
(31) American Notes 10 days, 324 pages
(32) Pictures From Italy 7 days, 211 pages
(33) Christmas Stories Volume I 10 days, 456 pages
(34) Christmas Stories Volume II 15 days, 472 pages
(35) Christmas Books 17 days, 525 pages
(36) The Annotated Christmas Carol  7 days, 380 pages
(37) Dombey and Son 30 days, 1,089 pages
(38) Sketches by Boz 22 days, 834 pages

2nd 1K Total: 26,834 pages (to SBBII) = 28.76 Average Pages Per Day
Grand Total: 40,273 pages, 20.83 Average Pages Per Day

(39) David Copperfield 21 days, 1,092 pages
(40) The Uncommercial Traveller 12 days, 440 pages
(41) A Child's History of England 10 days, 491 pages
(42) Reprinted Pieces 14 days, 368 pages
(43) Miscellaneous Papers Volume I 18 days, 542 pages
        + 25 pages Bleak Hose and 9 pages Miscellaneous Papers II = 2,000 days' worth.

2nd 1K Total: 29,801pages = 29.8 Average Pages Per Day
Grand Total: 43,250 pages, 21.625 Average Pages Per Day


DDR Day 2,001 to Day 3,000:

(1) Miscellaneous Papers Volume II 28 days (don't count, while reading BH), 494 pages
(2) Bleak House 37 days, 1,098 pages

494 - 9 = 485 + 1098 - 25 = 1073 = 1,558 pages towards 3K...in 37 days, for a daily rate of 42+ pages (!).
(3) Hard Times 11 days, 459 pages
(4) Little Dorrit 29 days, 1,606 pages
(5) A Tale of Two Cities 9 days, 460 pages
(6) Great Expectations 16 days, 580 pages
(7) Our Mutual Friend 29 days, 1,057 pages
(8) The Mystery of Edwin Drood 6 days, 314 pages 

FTR vis-a-vis Dickens: 18,671 pages in 468 days

(9) Dickens and Kafka, 7 days, 315 pages

(10) Franz Kafka: A Biography 8 days, 267 pages
(11) The Frozen Sea: A Study of Franz Kafka 5 days, 198 pages
(12) Franz Kafka, A Writer's Life 12 days, 385 pages

Stoned Humor & That Tool Time Guy



I had a little nip (one teaspoonful) of Delta 9 syrup yesterday. I've been experimenting with "dosage," as I've found that my "a sip" approach was not giving me enough control, and would often lead to four hours of such intense psychoactive action that all I could do was lie down and watch the show in my head. I didn't mind that, but I wanted the option of a lighter touch. So I started using a 1/4th teaspoon measure. 

I eventually found that 3/4ths of a teaspoon was good, but a bit light, so yesterday I upped it to a full teaspoon.

20 minutes after ingestion, I started feeling a little tingly. But it wasn't TOO intense, so I was able to continue reading without any problem. (It was impossible to read--or even watch TV--during the "sip" trials. There was just too much action going on in the frontal lobes. It was like trying to read / watch tv by strobe light. With a heavy metal orchestra. And naked dancing girls. And super-amplified monkey shrieks. And...well, you get the picture.)

And just as I was thinking, "This is a good dose"... about an hour in...a big wave hit me, and I went under. Fortunately I found that I could breathe down there. And I was even able to more or less watch tv.

A commercial came on. It was the Tool Time sidekick guy, Richard something-or-other. He was being all Confident and Macho-light, and I found that more amusing than I normally would. And as he droned on about whatever, I suddenly imagined that he stopped in mid-tirade, looked dead at the camera, and said, with a sparkle in his eyes, "But I like to eat my wife's pussy!" And then he went back to his commercial spiel without missing a beat.

Childish, I know, but in my elevated state of consciousness, I found it hilarious, and I laughed so hard that I cried. And after I finally got myself back together, I did an instant replay in my head and started laughing again.

This went on for quite some time.

Actually...I'm having a little chuckle at it right now.

Try Delta 9: for a GOOD LAUGH.


Thursday, September 21, 2023

Contemplation by Franz Kafka (also known as Meditation)

Published in Germany in 1912 under the title Betrachtung, Kafka's first book contained 18 pieces:

"Children on a Country Road" *

"Unmasking a Confidence Trickster"

"The Sudden Walk"

"Resolutions"

"Excursion into the Mountains" *

"Bachelor's Ill Luck"

"The Businessman"

"Absent-minded Window-gazing"

"The Way Home"

"Passers-by"

"On the Tram"

"Clothes" *

"The Rejection" *

"Reflections for Gentlemen-Jockeys"

"The Street Window" *

"The Wish to Be An Indian"

"The Trees" *

"Unhappiness"


Tuesday, September 19, 2023

DDR: The Frozen Sea: A Study of Franz Kafka by Charles Neider

Public Domain


Interesting. I couldn't even find a picture of the cover of this book. So here (above) is a substitute Frozen Sea. Ax sold seperately.

This is a relatively short book--V + 193 = 198 pages, so probably 10 days. Then it might be time for some real Kafka.


Day 1 (DDRD 2,149) September 19, 2023

Read to page 25.

On the Acknowledgements page, Neider thanks Dr. Frederic Wertham "for his comments on the proofs." (xi) So I guess we can assume there are no injury to the eye motifs in the text.

Neider seems like a bit of a stuffed shirt from the get-go as he tells us how previous interpreters of Kafka have all been wrong, taking a mystical view of the works. He blamed this at least partially on Max Brod and Edwin Muir (translator) as he says their introductions to the works lead readers astray. Well. That seems a bit much. But let's see what the boy has to say.

Neider also cracks on Camus' essay on Kafka ("Hope and Absurdity"), summing it up as "an improvisation on unsustained premises." (14) Well. That seems a bit uppity.

I think we could sum up this first 23 page chapter in one sentence: "Previous commentators on the work of Kafka: you are all wrong, and I am going to set you straight."

Hmmm.



Day 2 (DDRD 2,150) September 20, 2023

Read to page 57.

I'm sorry to say that this book is not doing it for me. For two reasons: (1) Neider constantly claims that everyone else is wrong about Kafka, and only he has the Straight Poop; (2) Neider doesn't go for specifics. He makes big statements but doesn't back them up with details. He seems to regard his Point of View as inviolate.

Neider refers to Joseph K.'S arrest in The Trial as stemming from "A baseless charge" (49). I'm pretty sure that means he missed the point of the novel. K. was actually guilty of the charge brought against him: guilty of being a human being...guilty of Original Sin if you want to look at it that way. The fact that he couldn't fight back against the charge is the tragedy, not the fact that he was wrongfully accused. 

I think.



And furthermore...this book isn't giving me anything vis-a-vis Kafka's publication history. So I'm thinking that maybe I should have a go at another biography after this one. Kafka, a Writer's Life by Joachim Unseld looks promising. I might have to have a peek at it as I slog through The Frozen Sea.


Day 3 (DDRD 2,151) September 21, 2023

Read to page 87.

The sentence which finished me with this book: "The trauma* may have in large part been responsible for 
his early pessimism and later psychic onanism." (58)

* The very early deaths of his two brothers.

This is the kind of sentence someone writes to show you how clever they are. It actually communicated nothing beyond that. For one thing, it undermines itself with the provisional "may have." It furthers that undermining with the prevarication of "in large part." And what is "psychic onanism? Well, Neider isn't telling, and it means nothing to me. Are there any details to develop this idea? Are you kidding? This is Neider, after all. I'm starting to really hate this guy.

Part iii, " Portrait of an Artist as a Pariah," seems like a straight up rip off of Max Brod's book.  There are no footnotes (or even a Bibliography), but sure as hell it's not a first hand account, so Neider got it from somewhere...he's just not telling you where. Which is a chickenshit thing to do.

And now...check this out:


Well, there you have it: proof positive that George Bendemann is a standing for Franz Kafka. Oh my aching balls. This is the kind of bullshit I might have written as a freshman at a community college. In fact, did just that. But then I grew the fuck up. KnowwhatI'msaying?

But it doesn't end there. On the next page, Neider apparently forgets his ridiculous algebra and let's us know that "Georg...is Herman Kafka." ~🧶🧶~ !



Day 4 (DDRD 2,152) September 22, 2023

Read to page 117. 76 pages to go.

At one point in today's pages, a previous reader had written


Which pretty much sums it up for me. 

And here's what Neider had to say about Kafka's writing: 

"Nowhere in the novel (or in Kafka's wider world) 
is there the figure of the saintly skeptic or noble humanist. To have introduced even one such 
type in The Trial, perhaps as a friend or mentor of K., would have lent the book an epic balance lacking in it." (115)

See? If only Neider had been able to get to him, Kafka might have turned out to be a great writer. Oh, the humanity!



Day 5 (DDRD 2,153) September 23, 2023

Read to page 148. It wasn't pleasant. Here are some reasons why:

Check this shit out: "We are all Jews today, wanderers and heathens in a world exploding under the impact of those myths of necessity and the absolute which characterizes western civilization's preoccupation with the competitive and acquisitive spirit." (118)

What the fucking fuckative fuck???? That is some seriously anti-Semitic bullshit. What is wrong with this Neider guy?

And after THAT, Neider goes off on a long discourse about male and female symbols, including a discussion of K. drinking brandy which Neider identifies as symbolic of masturbation. Mmm-hmmm. To Neider, The Castle is primarily about K.'s desire to fuck his mother. But to do this, he needs permission from his father.

?????

Oh my aching balls. I hope this Neider motherfucker was high when he wrote this, because if he wasn't, he was one sick little puppy.

Oh...and how about this: "The assistants, however, belong to the preconscious (they merely imitate the real assitants, who would belong to the unconscious, since their function as testicles is to carry the libido)...." (131)

So let me get this straight (no pun intended): In The Castle, the surveyor K.'s two assistants represent testicles. In this particular scene, however, the two assistants are actually two other assistants who represent the true assistants, and these "stand-in" assistants do NOT represent testicles.

Check.

Keep in mind that the two assistants (and there are only two) are not round or hairy, nor do they shrink when they are afraid or come into contact with cold water.

This is why people hate English majors. Hell, this is why I hate English majors, and I was one.

An with that in mind...I'm going to read a bit more today. Not for any positive reason, but because I want to be finished with this terrible book and move on. Of course, I could just quit reading it, but I'm more of an in for a pound guy. So....

So this reference The Castle:

"K. is Saul before he was reborn on the road to Damascus." (151) Hmph. I don't remember Saul having a boner for his mother.

And this, vis-a-vis The Trial

"Joseph K.'s arrest is a symbolic one. It is not caused by a civil authority. He is not incarcerated. It is a psychic arrestation, a fixation classical in neurosis. He is arrested on the anal level of sexual development. And he is a victim of a castration complex." (153)

And here I thought K. was arrested in his bedroom by representatives from the court. I guess they were just testicles.

I don't even want to talk about the anal and castration stuff.
😲😨😰

But oh...we must not forget this: 

"A bank is a depository for money. Money is a symbol of ordure. Therefore K.'s bank has an anal character." (153 - 154)

To which I can only say...HOLY SHIT! This motherfucker is insane!

And as to Neider shifting his terms / propositions around whenever it suits him, check this out;

"The bank symbolizes the conscious mind...." (159)

So in the space of a mere 5 pages, the bank has gone from a symbol of an ass packed with shit to a symbol of the conscious mind. That is quite a journey, ennit?

Stopped reading at 165 (gasp, gag, retch), which means there are only 30 text bearing pages left in this thing.

That's going to have to be good enough for the day.

P.S. 3 pages emphasizing verbs and nouns having to do with SEEing. Big Revelation: there are lots if them. IN EVERY BOOK EVER WRITTEN. 

P.P.S. "As a painter, he [Titorelli] is corprophilic." (177)
I had to look that word up. Ewwwww. And all painters like that shit, huh? *

* Pun intended, of course.


P.P.P.S. Is it crazy (lack of respect for Freud is equal to authoritarianism)? 
Is it prescient (we certainly have been heading for authoritarianism for more than a few decades now)?

"At present, his hidden influence is great, while overt respect for him is slim. This is but one of the aspects of the general current movement toward authoritarianism." (182)

P.P.P.P.S. Ain't gonna be no Day 6. I finished this bitch off at 11:43 pm...after going to a St. Paul and the Broken Bones concert.

Done.

Hooray.

This book was so wretched the (1) I wrote a book review for goodreads--the first for this book, and (2) I actually thought, "Maybe I don't want to do a Complete Kafka thing after all." Yep, Neider was so bad that he made me lose faith in Kafka. 

That's some powerful bad. A stink for the ages.

Avoid it if you can.











DDR Day 1 to 1,000: 13,449 pages read, 13.45 Average Pages Per Day
A History of Philosophy Volumes I - XI
History of Civilization in England Volumes I - III
Miscellaneous and Posthumous Works of Henry Thomas Buckle Volumes I - III
Civilization and Capitalism, 16th - 18th Century Volumes I - III
The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip IIl Volumes I - III
This Happened In My Presence: Moriscos, Old Christians, and the Spanish Inquisition in the Town of Deza, 1569-1611
The Stolen Village: Baltimore and the Barbary Pirates
Peat and Peat Cutting
+
DDR Day 1,001 to Day 2,000:
(1) Leviathan 63 days, 729 pages
(2) Stalingrad 27 days, 982 pages
(3) Life and Fate 26 days, 880 pages
(4) The Second World War 34 + 32 + 40 + 43 + 31 + 32 days = 212 days, 4,379 pages
(5) Baron Wenckheim's Homecoming 10 days, 572 pages
(6) The Great Bridge 25 days, 636 pages
(7) The Path Between the Seas 29 days, 698 pages
(8) Blake: Prophet Against Empire, 23 days, 523 pages
(9) Jerusalem 61 days, 1,266 pages
(10) Voice of the Fire 9 days, 320 pages
(11) The Fountainhead 15 days, 720 pages
(12) The Pacific Trilogy: Pacific Crucible 23 days, 640 pages
(13) The Pacific Trilogy: The Conquering Tide 28 days, 656 pages
(14) The Pacific Trilogy: Twilight of the Gods 31 days, 944 pages
(15) Jazz: Its Evolution and Essence 13 days, 304 pages
(16) Toward Jazz 18 days, 224 pages
(17) The Worlds of Jazz 13 days, 279 pages
(18) To Be or Not...to Bop 14 days, 571 pages
(19) Kind of Blue 4 days, 224 pages
(20) Kind of Blue: Miles Davis and his Masterpiece: 5 days, 256 pages
(21) Miles: The Autobiography 16 days, 445 pages
(21) A Love Supreme: The Story of John Coltrane's Signature Album: 8 days, 287 pages
(22) Ascension: John Coltrane and His Quest 8 days, 304 pages
(23) Living With Music: Ralph Ellison's Jazz Writings 11 days 325 pages
(24) The Pickwick Papers 28 days, 983 pages
(25) Oliver Twist 16 days, 542 pages
(26) Nicholas Nickleby 27 days, 1,045 pages
(27) The Old Curiosity Shop 22 days, 753 pages
(28) Barnaby Rudge 24 days, 866 pages
(29) Master Humprhey's Clock 4 days, 145 pages
(30) Martin Chuzzlewit 32 days, 1,045 pages
(31) American Notes 10 days, 324 pages
(32) Pictures From Italy 7 days, 211 pages
(33) Christmas Stories Volume I 10 days, 456 pages
(34) Christmas Stories Volume II 15 days, 472 pages
(35) Christmas Books 17 days, 525 pages
(36) The Annotated Christmas Carol  7 days, 380 pages
(37) Dombey and Son 30 days, 1,089 pages
(38) Sketches by Boz 22 days, 834 pages

2nd 1K Total: 26,834 pages (to SBBII) = 28.76 Average Pages Per Day
Grand Total: 40,273 pages, 20.83 Average Pages Per Day

(39) David Copperfield 21 days, 1,092 pages
(40) The Uncommercial Traveller 12 days, 440 pages
(41) A Child's History of England 10 days, 491 pages
(42) Reprinted Pieces 14 days, 368 pages
(43) Miscellaneous Papers Volume I 18 days, 542 pages
        + 25 pages Bleak Hose and 9 pages Miscellaneous Papers II = 2,000 days' worth.

2nd 1K Total: 29,801pages = 29.8 Average Pages Per Day
Grand Total: 43,250 pages, 21.625 Average Pages Per Day


DDR Day 2,001 to Day 3,000:

(1) Miscellaneous Papers Volume II 28 days (don't count, while reading BH), 494 pages
(2) Bleak House 37 days, 1,098 pages

494 - 9 = 485 + 1098 - 25 = 1073 = 1,558 pages towards 3K...in 37 days, for a daily rate of 42+ pages (!).
(3) Hard Times 11 days, 459 pages
(4) Little Dorrit 29 days, 1,606 pages
(5) A Tale of Two Cities 9 days, 460 pages
(6) Great Expectations 16 days, 580 pages
(7) Our Mutual Friend 29 days, 1,057 pages
(8) The Mystery of Edwin Drood 6 days, 314 pages 

FTR vis-a-vis Dickens: 18,671 pages in 468 days

(9) Dickens and Kafka, 7 days, 315 pages

(10) Franz Kafka: A Biography 8 days, 267 pages
(11) The Frozen Sea: A Study of Franz Kafka 5 days, 198

Wednesday, September 13, 2023

A Thought I Had When I Was Stoned on Delta 8 Yesterday


It's sometimes hard to believe that a single person can do anything to affect the world these days, 
but 
isn't it inarguably true that everything that begins begins with one person? That would essentially mean that a single person affects the world all the time.

Help, I'm steppin' Into the Twilight Zone

Coincidences.

Three of them. Or, as the Irish say, "Tree ovum."

(1) I read a clickbait story about how The Rolling Stones originally recorded "Start Me Up" (then called "Never Stop") as a reggae song. They couldn't get it to where they liked it, though, so it was buried in the archives until someone or other went on a fishing expedition, found it, and they resurrected it as a rock (-ish) song. The next day I was driving down Shelbyville Road and I started thinking about that story, and I thought, "I'd like to hear "Start Me Up." I turned on the radio, hit the channel change button, and "Start Me Up" was playing.

(2) I had just started reading Max Brod's Franz Kafka: A Biography. Hadn't said anything about it to anybody except my blog readers, of which my sister is not one. She sent me a message on Facebook: the story about Kafka and the doll. (If you don't know this story, it's worth looking for.)

(3) My friend Pat had texted me to ask me about a Dostoyevsky line she'd just read. I responded and we back and forthed a bit, then I signed off and went to bed. The next morning as I was having my coffee I started thinking about Pat and since it was too early to call (5:45 am), I reached for my phone to text her. Before I could get a word finished, though, my phone buzzed and I had a text from...Pat. And what's even weirder is that her text was time stamped 9:45 pm. 

Do do do do, do do do do....

Again, Asimov

 


I keep thinking that I've bought my last Asimov book, but for one reason or another I still manage to pick one up once in awhile. This was one of the ones I owned a copy of when I was a teenager. I don't remember it at all. But it was only $5, and....

When I went to pay for it, the guy behind the counter asked me if I knew the author. I told him that I did, and that I'd read a number of his books.

The cashier guy replied, "I just put two of his books in the Science section. Non-fiction! Did you know that he wrote NON-FICTION?"

I averred that I did, indeed, know this, and added that Asimov had written over 500 books.

Not to be deterred, the cashier guy said, "But did you know that he wrote NON-FICTION?"

I smiled, nodded, thanked him, left.

At least he was enthusiastic.

Monday, September 11, 2023

🕊

"The soul can only blossom forth to its sublime and rare capacities when it feels it is being met with faith."

Max Brod


🕊

So show a little faith.

There's magic in the night.


Sunday, September 10, 2023

DDR: Franz Kafka: A Biography by Max Brod

 

v + 267 = 272 pages


Day 1 (DDRD 2,141) September 11, 2023

Read to page 38 (of 267). Turns out that Max Bros is a most excellent writer. So much so that I've been trying to track down one of his novels, Tycho Brahe's Path to God. No free version (yet), and only pretty pricey copies found so far, but I'm still looking.

Meanwhile....

First "adult" Kafka writing mentioned by Brod (but referred to as "one of his last writings") is Letter to My Father, written November 1919.

And here's a thing which made me think about the three major romances in my life:

"The question arises, posed in sober arrogance, "What did Kafka need his father for?" Or, better put, "Why was he not able to break away from him...?" (22)

Of course, that's wife (x 2) and first girlfriend instead of father. Something to think about...especially since I've now broken away from two of them and am good friends with the other.

Also, this:

"The soul can only blossom forth to its sublime and rare capacities when it feels it is being met with faith." (34)

Thus far this book isn't giving me what I was looking for--a solid, chronological listing of Kafka's works--but it's giving me a lot of good stuff that I wasn't looking for.

I'm reading this book courtesy of Internet Archive. Which is very cool and lovely (not to mention free), but since it can't be downloaded, it means I can't travel read, which puts a damper on things. Guess ill just have to have another book for travels.



Day 2 (DDRD 2,142) September 12, 2023

Read to page 77.

Brod makes reference to a picture that hangs over young Kafka's desk: The ploughman (1897), an etching by Hans Thoma (1839-1924).


Brod refers to Kafka reading to him, in 1909, the beginning of a novel, "Wedding Preparations in the Country." (Looks like only 24 pages of this were written... or survived.)

March 14, 1910, Kafka reads "Description of A Battle."

Second * published work "The Aeroplanes at Brescia" September 28, 1909.

Third published work "Contemplations" which included "At the Window," "At Night," "Clothes," "The Passenger," and "Thoughts For Gentlemen Riders." 

Pages 68 -  73 include the text of various notes (15 of them) Kafka wrote to Brod. Brod prefaced his presentation of them by noting how extraordinary they are, but they seemed pretty staid to me. It would have been nice if they'd been dated, but maybe that wasn't possible. In any event, if you want the complete complete Kafka, clearly you'll need to read this book. 

Reference to a play Kafka wrote, "The Watchman of the Tomb."


* Brod doesn't say what Kafka's first published work was.



Day 3 (DDRD 2,143) September 13, 2023

Read to page 95.

From page 83 to 84, Brod quotes from something that Kafka wrote for his job at the Worker's Insurance office. Once again, Brod presents this as a shard of genius, but truth to tell it's pretty banal. Not bad, mind you, not at all. But certainly nothing extraordinary...or even noteworthy.

Brod refers to "Josephine the Songstress--or The Mice-Nation" as the last piece that Kafka wrote (95).



Day 4 (DDRD 2,144) September 14, 2023

Read to page 126.

Kafka's first book is Contemplation

Mentions story "Excursions Into the Dark Red" from 1904. 


Brod mentions that Kafka's favorite song (which he liked to sing) was "Count Eberstein" by Löwe. This might be a version of that song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=vwSQM1JdliY ...assuming that C. Loewe is Brod's Löwe, and that Graf is German for Count. 

Minutes later: Yes to the German, and this https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=JZdE__We8yw seems to indicate that it is indeed the song Brod was referring to. So Victory there.

"...the idea that Kafka was a kind of stylite or anchorite is completely wrong." (116)

Brod mentions that he and Kafka planned to write a novel together, Richard and Samuel. (119) Apparently a portion if this was completed and published in a periodical (Herderblätter).

Brod also talks about how he and Kafka "planned" a series of travel guides entitled "In the Cheap." He says that he and Kafka "laughed ourselves sick" (121) when they talked about this. What an image, eh?

And btw, Kafka was, quite the Max, a huge fan of Goethe. I'm sorry to say that I've never read anything by The Man.

Kafka's first book, Contemplation , is so short that he publishers decide to print it in "unusually large / gigantic type." (125) Even so it is only 99 pages, and only 800 numbered copies are printed.

Kafka writes "The Verdict" September 22 to 23, 1912, in one sitting.



Day 5 (DDRD 2,145) September 15, 2023

Read to page 158.

November 1912 "The Metamorphosis" written.

May 1913 "The Stoker" published.

"In September [1914] he read aloud to me the first chapter of the novel The Trial, and in November, In the Penal Colony." (146)

"The Railroad in Russia."

December 13, 1914 finishes "Exegesis of the Legend" (published as chapter 9 of The Trial).

December 18 writes "The Giant Mole."

April 1915 Chapters 5 and 6 of The Trial.

February 1916 "Investigations of A Dog."



Day 6 (DDRD 2,146) September 16, 2023

Read to page 190.

The text of this book ends on page 260. So not only am I under 100 pages to go...I'm only 70 pages from the end, which is two days' worth of reading. I think The Frozen Sea is next. Which is a lot of foreplay, I suppose, but it feels like the thing to do this time around. 

Brod talks about Kafka's going to a convalescent center, Zürau, and I Googled about to see if I could find a picture of it. I was expecting something Magic Mountain-ish (of course), and found a short video, Kafka in Zürau) @
https://vimeo.com/175186046. The narration is in German and I could only catch a few words here and there (entshuldigung, Frau Bosley), but there were some good pictures of the sanatorium and of Kafka...who looked strangely happy. 
 
Brod quotes Kafka: "Man cannot live without a permanent faith in something indestructible in himself...." (172)

Yep. Maybe that's why some people kill themselves: they're seeking to escape the fragile, temporary world (filled with pain and disappointment and sorrow) we live in to enter into the permanent world we come from.

Brod: "...every great writer has made some facet of life clear, that no one has seen so clearly before him." (173) Which Brod follows with: "And what has become clear through Kafka? The unclear news of life!"

Which is funny and maybe partially true...but certainly not definitely true.

March 15, 1922, Kafka reads the beginning of The Castle to Brod.



Day 7 (DDRD 2,147) September 17, 2023

Read to page 220.

Again Brod includes material which he refers to as not published. Maybe it has been published since then, but if not, then that means the only way to read The Complete Kafka is to read this book. For future reference, the fragment Brod quotes from here is a 14 page story about a night traveler looking for an inn when he encounters a strangely hostile family who invite him to lodge with them.

Then there's this bit of loveliness:



Conversations With Kafka by Gustav Janouch sounds like a must read, too. Gustav recorded conversations that he had with Kafka. I want that.

Speaking of Kafka's conversations, Brod stretches my credulity by saying, "Kafka was absolutely incapable of saying anything insignificant." (218) Dud I say stretches? I meant breaks. There is no human being who makes it through life without saying many insignificant things. Unless s/he never speaks, of course. But that's what love does, isn't it? It magnifies the good to such an extent that the not-so-good becomes unnoticeable.



Day 8 (DDRD 2,148) September 18, 2023

Read to page 260 = The End. Going for a swim in The Frozen Sea tomorrow.

Meanwhile...


Hmmm. That's more than a little disturbing. It comes courtesy of Milena...as in Letters to.

According to the CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE, Kafka's first published work (1909) was "Description of A Struggle." So THAT'S settled.

A book which sounds interesting and which may have influenced Kafka's The Castle (and which certainly was a book he read and loved): The Grandmother by Božena Němcová. The copies I've found have Bern pricey ($35 and up), but it looks like Wiki source has the whole novel online.






DDR Day 1 to 1,000: 13,449 pages read, 13.45 Average Pages Per Day
A History of Philosophy Volumes I - XI
History of Civilization in England Volumes I - III
Miscellaneous and Posthumous Works of Henry Thomas Buckle Volumes I - III
Civilization and Capitalism, 16th - 18th Century Volumes I - III
The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip IIl Volumes I - III
This Happened In My Presence: Moriscos, Old Christians, and the Spanish Inquisition in the Town of Deza, 1569-1611
The Stolen Village: Baltimore and the Barbary Pirates
Peat and Peat Cutting
+
DDR Day 1001 to Day 2000:
(1) Leviathan 63 days, 729 pages
(2) Stalingrad 27 days, 982 pages
(3) Life and Fate 26 days, 880 pages
(4) The Second World War 34 + 32 + 40 + 43 + 31 + 32 days = 212 days, 4,379 pages
(5) Baron Wenckheim's Homecoming 10 days, 572 pages
(6) The Great Bridge 25 days, 636 pages
(7) The Path Between the Seas 29 days, 698 pages
(8) Blake: Prophet Against Empire, 23 days, 523 pages
(9) Jerusalem 61 days, 1,266 pages
(10) Voice of the Fire 9 days, 320 pages
(11) The Fountainhead 15 days, 720 pages
(12) The Pacific Trilogy: Pacific Crucible 23 days, 640 pages
(13) The Pacific Trilogy: The Conquering Tide 28 days, 656 pages
(14) The Pacific Trilogy: Twilight of the Gods 31 days, 944 pages
(15) Jazz: Its Evolution and Essence 13 days, 304 pages
(16) Toward Jazz 18 days, 224 pages
(17) The Worlds of Jazz 13 days, 279 pages
(18) To Be or Not...to Bop 14 days, 571 pages
(19) Kind of Blue 4 days, 224 pages
(20) Kind of Blue: Miles Davis and his Masterpiece: 5 days, 256 pages
(21) Miles: The Autobiography 16 days, 445 pages
(21) A Love Supreme: The Story of John Coltrane's Signature Album: 8 days, 287 pages
(22) Ascension: John Coltrane and His Quest 8 days, 304 pages
(23) Living With Music: Ralph Ellison's Jazz Writings 11 days 325 pages
(24) The Pickwick Papers 28 days, 983 pages
(25) Oliver Twist 16 days, 542 pages
(26) Nicholas Nickleby 27 days, 1,045 pages
(27) The Old Curiosity Shop 22 days, 753 pages
(28) Barnaby Rudge 24 days, 866 pages
(29) Master Humprhey's Clock 4 days, 145 pages
(30) Martin Chuzzlewit 32 days, 1,045 pages
(31) American Notes 10 days, 324 pages
(32) Pictures From Italy 7 days, 211 pages
(33) Christmas Stories Volume I 10 days, 456 pages
(34) Christmas Stories Volume II 15 days, 472 pages
(35) Christmas Books 17 days, 525 pages
(36) The Annotated Christmas Carol  7 days, 380 pages
(37) Dombey and Son 30 days, 1,089 pages
(38) Sketches by Boz 22 days, 834 pages

2nd 1K Total: 26,834 pages (to SBBII) = 28.76 Average Pages Per Day
Grand Total: 40,273 pages, 20.83 Average Pages Per Day

(39) David Copperfield 21 days, 1,092 pages
(40) The Uncommercial Traveller 12 days, 440 pages
(41) A Child's History of England 10 days, 491 pages
(42) Reprinted Pieces 14 days, 368 pages
(43) Miscellaneous Papers Volume I 18 days, 542 pages
        + 25 pages Bleak Hose and 9 pages Miscellaneous Papers II = 2,000 days' worth.

2nd 1K Total: 29,801pages = 29.8 Average Pages Per Day
Grand Total: 43,250 pages, 21.625 Average Pages Per Day

(44) Miscellaneous Papers Volume II 28 days (don't count, while reading BH), 494 pages
(45) Bleak House 37 days, 1,098 pages

494 - 9 = 485 + 1098 - 25 = 1073 = 1,558 pages towards 3K...in 37 days, for a daily rate of 42+ pages (!).
(46) Hard Times 11 days, 459 pages
(47) Little Dorrit 29 days, 1,606 pages
(48) A Tale of Two Cities 9 days, 460 pages
(49) Great Expectations 16 days, 580 pages
(50) Our Mutual Friend 29 days, 1,057 pages
(51) The Mystery of Edwin Drood 6 days, 314 pages FTR vis-a-vis Dickens: 18,671 pages in 468 days
(52) Dickens and Kafka, 7 days, 315 pages
(53) Franz Kafka: A Biography, 8 days, 267 pages