Showing posts with label Loneliness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Loneliness. Show all posts

Sunday, August 31, 2025

Hope in Paris (The Teddy Bear Chronicles Book 1) by Donnalyn Vjota; The Adventures of The We Really Care Bears

 

Hope in Paris (The Teddy Bear Chronicles Book 1) by Donnalyn Vjota; The Adventures of The We Really Care Bears

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: I am going to give a warning before I begin the review. Bear with me now.

Donnalyn Vjota’s book Hope in Paris: The Teddy Bear Chronicles is NOT a children’s book. Yes it is narrated by three plush teddy bears. Yes, it’s a cute concept and there are even some moments that could be considered adorable. But this is a book that is written for adults (maybe teens but adults are the central target audience.) Adult themes like domestic abuse, mental illness, sex, stalkers, mid-life crises, familial abandonment, addiction, and murder are important plot points. Now that's over, with the review. 

The idea of an adult novel told from the point of view of stuffed animals has potential to be an overly cutesy saccharine fluff piece or a Contemporary Fantasy in which the humans interact with the toys ala Ted or the toys talk to each other ala Toy Story. But despite the odd premise, Vjota actually writes the book, Hope in Paris, as straight and as realistic as she can. With of course the added caveat that the narrators of the book are a trio of stuffed bears belonging to some damaged and helpless humans that need some assistance to make their difficult lives more bearable. 

The three bears are:

Fair Bear was won at the Illinois State Fair by Mark as a gift for his girlfriend, Haley. Haley left and now Fair Bear lives with Mark and his new girlfriend, Kelly. However, the relationship between Kelly and Mark is becoming toxic and abusive and Fair Bear has to be an eyewitness to various violent acts, particularly getting thrown around by this pair of angry humans.

Love Bear is owned by Richard, who is perpetually unlucky in love. He promised his deceased mother that he would settle down and marry the right woman but his ideas about romance are overwhelming. On the third date, he tried to give an expensive gift and Love Bear to them as a marriage proposal which they turn down leaving him alone with his plushy ursine friend.

Sleepy Time Bear is the companion of Ms. V, an American former actress turned drama teacher living in Paris and working at an orphanage. She has mental health difficulties and a mysterious past that gets revealed through the course of the book.

 The three bears and their humans are thrown together in Paris where they end up linked to each other in surprising ways that will give them and the Readers great paws.

One of the most interesting and endearing touches to the book are the bears themselves, their narrative voices, and their relationships with their human companions. It's particularly amusing how the humans take their bears everywhere they go to the store, to a cafe, on a date, on vacation, and just about everywhere else. Of course Vjota did this for narrative purposes so the bears could report on important plot points but there are deeper possibilities. It could be that they are that lonely and desperate for someone, anyone to talk to, confide in, and hold onto even if they can't move or talk back to them. 

The bears awaken those inner children who used their imaginations to find a temporary escape from their sadness and despair. Having a Bedtime Bear Care Bear on my bed who watches with Grogu, Sadness, Hilda The Plush Witch, and Trixy The Plush Black Cat as I work from home, get depressed, have panic attacks, stress about deadlines, get lost in a book, and ruminate about middle age, I completely understand the need to have those comfort objects when we just can't bear it any longer. 

These characters’ emotions run the gamut between too hot, too cold, and just right.They alternate between childlike naivete and deep awareness. There are things that they don't completely understand about the human world that surrounds them. For example, Sleepy Time Bear confuses one of Ms. V's psychotic breaks with a play rehearsal. It just assumes that she's talking in character and playing a role when one of her alternate personalities or delusions take over.

This childlike innocence gives them an empathetic understanding towards their human friends. Sleepy Time is presented by Ms. V at night to orphans who can’t sleep. It is also there as a friend shaped shoulder to cry on when Ms. V is overwhelmed by her illness and estrangement from family members. Sleepy Time Bear is a silent observer that loves her and never judges her and instead opens its furry arms in comfort and acceptance.

Sometimes the bears are wiser than the humans. That is particularly true with Love Bear and its relationship with Richard. While it is a bear that represents romance, Love can be very sardonic and frequently snarks about the human friend. After observing Richard missing flirtatious cues from a woman named Rachel, Love Bear practically face-paws with embarrassment from inside its bag. “The man does not know flirting even when it's standing in front of him and named Rachel,” Love fumes. 

At times, Love practically acts as Richard’s wing man uh bear observing his companion’s dates and commenting on his failures and successes. However, Love is also aware that Richard is lonely and wants to love and be loved. He just doesn’t know how to pursue it and has overblown fantasies about what it should mean. Once he learns to slow down and let a relationship take its course, Richard is able to show himself to be the nice sweet slightly geeky but solid dependable guy that Love Bear knows him to be. The type of man who anyone would be interested in taking their relationship fur-ther.

The book gets incredibly dark particularly during Fair Bear’s chapters that focus on Kelly and Mark’s troubled relationship. There are moments of anguish when Fair observes Kelly getting beaten and threatened by her boyfriend. It wants to do more to help but knows that it is limited since it's just an inanimate object and unable to physically help her. It’s just an object for her to cuddle and pour her heart out to when she can't take it anymore.

However, a twist occurs in which Fair turns out to contribute more than just comfort for Kelly. In fact, it becomes an important clue that inspires Kelly to leave Mark and find evidence against him when she learns of his criminal history. She is grateful for Fair Bear’s unintentional assistance and when she finally departs, she takes the grateful bear with her. Kelly definitely chose the bear but this time the bear also chose her. 

The teddy bears in the book may be inanimate and unable to actually communicate with their human friends but they are also catalysts for them to change and improve their lives. To leave broken relationships and dead end jobs. To find real love. To rediscover their roots and reunite with people they thought were gone from their lives. To reinvent and rediscover themselves. To become self-actualized and authentic. They reached for the bears for companionship and to soothe aching hurts and instead changed their lives for the better. Thanks to their furever friends. 





Wednesday, November 15, 2023

New Book Alert: A Festive Juxtaposition by Paul R. Stanton; The Devil Takes a Holiday (So Do Formatting and Editing)




 New Book Alert: A Festive Juxtaposition by Paul R. Stanton; The Devil Takes a Holiday (So Do Formatting and Editing)

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Come on, even Satan can’t be the Odious Spinner of Lies, Prince of the Power of the Air, Leader of All That is Evil, Tempter, Ruler of Hell, and King of the Bottomless Pit forever. Every once in a while the Dude from Down Under (not Australia) needs to take a break and why not during the Christmas season?  In Paul R. Stanton’s dark comedic satire, A Festive Juxtaposition, that is exactly what he does. This book is a brilliant concept and idea that is mostly carried out rather well, but is unfortunately hampered by bad formatting and some technical issues that could have been resolved with better editing and proofreading. 


The Devil materializes out of thin air at 6:27 PM Greenwich Mean Time at Charing Cross Station. He forgoes the usual pitchfork, cape, horns, red skin, cloven hoofs, and scent of sulfur effect. Instead he takes the name Nick and opts to dress like a normal  Londoner: nice suit, quiet demeanor, unassuming behavior, the guy you might say hello to but then forget about a few minutes later. Since this is his time off, he just intends to enjoy a holiday stroll while actually (gasp) doing good for some desperate Londerners and punishing a few bad ones.  He gets involved in the lives of those that he calls “The Dispossessed” and changes their lives in many ways. It’s sort of like Touched By A Devil (minus the unfortunate implications of the title). 


Stanton has a gift for darkly comic writing that questions the Reader’s assumptions about religion, God, the Devil, and the concepts of good and evil. In some ways, A Festive Juxtaposition is very similar to Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett with its all too human demonic protagonist and its biting commentary on religion. The Devil is written very similarly to Crowley, the demon from Good Omens. He is a very slick sardonic figure who has grown to like humanity to the point of actually wanting to help them out of the messes in which they are in. In fact, he even challenges the remoteness of God by wondering how a seemingly loving deity can be standoffish towards the people that he created and not doing anything to help them on Earth. After all, the Devil may be (incredibly and completely) flawed but at least he’s there. He sees the suffering and tries his best (and admittedly worst) to provide some form of aid and comfort. 


The Dispossessed are the usual grab bag of city dwellers from all walks of life and all in need of some help or a sympathetic ear towards their problems: addicts, the lovelorn, mentally ill, the suicidal, career criminals, people who are doubting their faiths and beliefs. These are people who are in need of help right away and help comes from the strangest of sources. 

The formula from each story is the saame. A human is in some kind of trouble or desperately needs something. They meet a strange man who seems to know more about themselves than they do. He assists or offers them advice on their particular predicament, sometimes providing the means for the solution. The person is left trying to decide whether to take that offer. The epilogue then catches up to that person to say whether they  took the initiative and how it changed their lives for better or worse. 


There's Nigel, a young stubborn runaway whom the Devil has to use some tough love and all caps to get him to go home to his parents and make him realize that whatever disagreement that he has with his pater and mater familias can't be as bad as sleeping on the streets and dying from hypothermia. 

Nick also helps May, another young runaway, by posing as a private detective who had been hired by May’s parents. He even presents letters from her mother and stepfather to complete the effect.


There's Old Meg, a former prostitute who has lost her looks and charisma. She also seems to recognize “Nick” but it is purposely open for debate whether she knows that he's the Devil, thinks he's a former client, or doesn't really recognize him at all and just thinks that she does. Either way, Nick is enough of a gentleman to send her to better surroundings.

The Professor is a former academic whose career was ruined by a sex scandal and has fallen into the bottle ever since. He gets into an intellectual debate with the Horned One over the existence of God and source of Creation before he receives a potential answer to his crisis.


Nick isn't there just to help others. He's also there to mete out punishment to those with evil intent and do not have the excuse of saying “the Devil made them do it.” People like Ed, Barry, and Razors, a trio that like to rob and harm others just for the lulz. They realize too late that robbing the Devil is not a good idea. In one of the darkest and most humorous dialogues in the book, after the trio ask who the Devil Nick is, he gives a sinister grin and tells them to turn their question into a declaration, reverse “are” and “you,”  put them at the head of the sentence, drop “who,” and then they will have their answer.

Next on Nick's Nice List are Lucy and Dominic, a pair of addicts who desperately need to get Dominic to a hospital. Nick helps them while putting Laz, a soulless career criminal with a penchant for hallucinogens and taking advantage of the troubled couple, on his Naughty List.


Miriam is a domestic abuse survivor who is in the process of getting herself and her beloved dog Tigger evicted. Maybe, that mysterious slightly demonic representative from her husband's law firm can help. Unfortunately, the news is not what Miriam suspected and may only make her life worse.

While Nick spends much time with the impoverished, even the more economically advantaged need diabolical intervention. His latest mortal is Michael Asquith, a well dressed man caught up in a conundrum. He is engaged but during a night of drunkenness, he had an affair and now is debating whether to tell his fiancee and end the engagement or live a lie. All of this is figured out by the Devil’s talent for deductive reasoning. (Sherlock Holmes had to learn it from somebody. Why not the Prince of well not Darkness but slightly Charcoal Gray?)


To prove that the Devil can be a good sport, he even lends a claw to a member of the Rival team by helping Rev. Adrian Noble. Noble’s church has been closed, left desolate, and is in the process of renovation. His church is low on funding and parishioners and Noble is hovering towards despair and doubts in his faith. Even the Devil is willing to forego an ancient rivalry to help a truly good man.

After messing with time travel and getting the better of a DoomSayer on the street, Nick encounters the final Dispossessed: Peggy, an anxious sad woman. Posing as a police officer, Nick questions her about her possible involvement in the death of a young woman. Peggy is confused and frightened about this line of questioning, but it becomes clear that this conversation is more personal than she thought.

14 lost souls. 14 lonely people in dire need of help and some lessons that they need to learn. Help comes in the form of a devil of an aid. 


This book is a wonderful concept and weaves the various diverse characters with the Devil making the book a fascinating ensemble. However, what could be a perfect work is seriously hampered by poor editing and formatting. Words are spelled differently sometimes within a few paragraphs. Passive voice is used over active voice and creates too many filler words (“had seen” instead of “saw.”) 

The worst issue is the formatting. The text is pushed upwards right underneath the cover, putting the pages out of order from the table of contents. There are little sprigs of holly that were probably intended to be paragraph breaks but some of them are inserted in the middle of sentences and even words. This makes the narrative visually confusing and deters from an otherwise potentially great story.


A Festive Juxtaposition is mechanically flawed, but the concept and themes are brilliant and challenges what we think that we know about God, The Devil, Good, Evil, and Mankind.




Tuesday, February 2, 2021

Classics Corner: The Collected Stories of Franz Kafka by Franz Kafka; Into the Weird, Creepy, and Terrifying Mind of The Kafkaesque



Classics Corner: The Collected Stories of Franz Kafka by Franz Kafka; Into the Weird, Creepy, and Terrifying Mind of The Kafkaesque

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: There are few authors who are so ubiquitous with a chosen genre, that their names are synonymous with a certain type of writing. Those terms become almost shorthand. Dickensian calls to mind Victorian cities, intense poverty, and characters with bizarre names. Austen-esque makes one think of romance, particularly Regency-era, social commentary, and witty lovers. Orwellian is comparable to police states, dictatorships, and thought crimes.


Another author who lent his name to a style of writing was Franz Kafka (1883-1924). The term Kafkaesque describes the situations which Kafka wrote. The situations are surreal distortions and reveal a senseless, menacing, complex sense of danger.

Last year, I reviewed The Trial, which featured Josef K., Who was on trial for a crime that he didn't even know he committed. He suffers through a bureaucratic nightmare of a trial in which he can barely defend himself. It's an existential surreal situation in which Josef finds himself, the kind that puts the entire legal system on trial. 


These situations were the type that Kafka was knowledgeable about in his whole life. He was born into a middle class German-Jewish family in Prague and was the eldest of six children. His father Hermann, a ritual slaughterer and later a fashion retailer, was severe and cold leaving many scars that appeared in Kafka's writing. His mother was shy, but also never home much, spending 12 hours a day managing the family business. Because of this, Kafka's childhood was a lonely one.

During WWI, two of his sisters moved with their children back to the family home after their husbands went missing. Kafka moved out of the family home at age 31 getting some long sought for quiet.

Though his family were Ashkenazi Jews, Kafka often disagreed with Jewish law and eventually only visited synagogues on the high holy days. He later became more interested in the Yiddish Language and Literature and studied Zionism. He was also an ardent Socialist.


Kafka studied Law at the Deutschland Karl-Ferdinands Universitat in Prague. It was at University where he met fellow law student, Max Brod who became his best friend. Brod described his friend as an avid reader and someone who rarely spoke, but when he did it was important and profound. After Kafka received his Doctor of Law in 1906, he worked as an unpaid law clerk. In 1907, he worked for an insurance company. The long hours and tedious work left him little time for writing. He resigned in 1908 and worked at a company that was more agreeable to his schedule. He eventually became partners with his brother in law at an asbestos company. He enjoyed it at first but felt this partnership also encroached in his writing. In WWI, he attempted to enlist but was discovered to have health difficulties, associated with tuberculosis, which would cause him problems for the rest of his life.

Besides physical health, Kafka had mental health problems as well. He had depression and often said he feared the world inside his head. Modern psychologists believe that he may have had schizoid personality disorder or borderline personality disorder. He certainly saw a lot of bleakness and darkness in the world and that influenced his writing. 


Kafka never married, but had a few girlfriends some of which were the inspiration for characters in his works. He had a strong correspondence with one of his girlfriends, Felice Bauer which resulted in the book, Letters to Felice. He also dedicated his story, "The Judgement" to her.

He was also fond of children. An apocryphal tale reflects this in which Kafka comforted a little girl who had lost her doll. Kafka calling himself "the doll postal worker" wrote her a series of letters pretending to be the doll and explaining that she had gone on a trip and wanted to see the world. He returned with a new doll that looked nothing like the old one but was attached to a note that says, "My travels have changed me." There are some doubts to the veracity of this lovely tale, but it reveals a contrast to the  Kafka people usually are familiar with.Even though there was a dark side to his personality, Kafka was also very imaginative and childlike at times.


Kafka died of tuberculosis in 1924 at the age of 40. Some of his works such as The Trial and The Metamorphosis were published during his lifetime. On his deathbed, he made Brod, his executor, burn his unpublished works including his stories, letters, sketches, and diaries. Brod ignored him and from 1925-1935 had his novels and collected works published. His final lover, Dora Diamant kept some of his letters and notebooks but they were confiscated by the Gestapo in 1933. Scholars continue to search for them.


Kafka's works demonstrate the surreal darkness and are filled with themes of existential crisis and dehumanization. There is an overwhelming sense of complex danger and fear in his short works as well as long. The Collected Stories are a collection of his short stories and novels. Some are extremely complex and hard to define, but most carry those dark themes in which Kafka was known. 


The best of these works are: 


Meditations or Contemplations (1912)

" Unmasking a Confidence Trickster"

Plot: While approaching a house, a recent emigre spots another man who he recognizes as a con artist and tries to avoid him.


Review: The majority of the works in Contemplations are very short two or three paragraphs or barely fill a whole page. They take a short time to reflect a mood, but when they do, the mood is impactful partly because of their brief length.

This particular scenario shows conflict between immigrants and citizens. The Narrator believes that the Confidence Trickster finds him an easy target because he's new to the country. He is hyper aware of the xenophobia that surrounds him, perhaps has already experienced, so he suspects it around him. 

The text never says whether the other man is a confidence trickster or not. Except for a couple of minor lines, he doesn't say anything at all. It's enough that the newcomer suspects that he is, leading to an intense fear and uncertainty bordering on paranoia in his new surroundings.


"Resolutions"

Plot: The narrator is depressed and resolves to pull himself out, but the more he tries the unhappier he feels.


Review: This brief story reveals what it is like to have Depression and is among the most accurate depictions of the illness that I have ever read. The Narrator, possibly Kafka himself since the story first appeared in his journal in 1911, wants to pull himself out. He wants to put on a show, a smile,and be friendly towards his acquaintances that he dubs A,B, and C. He even wonders if it's worth it to even rise from his chair. There are days when it is a great achievement for someone with depression to rise from their bed. 

The Narrator then realizes that it's easier to "throttle down whatever ghostly life remains in you" and refrain from human interaction. Sometimes all someone with depression wants to do is avoid everyone else and be alone with their thoughts. For me this story is 100% accurate as though I, or the more than 3 million people who have this disorder, could have written it. In some ways, I, or rather we, have.


"The Tradesman" 

Plot: A businessman goes about his daily business in a job that depresses him. He feels disconnected from his clients even though he tries to help them. On his way home, he feels depressed and has an out of body experience in which he observes a man getting robbed.


Review: As I mentioned in Kafka's biography, Kafka worked as an insurance clerk but felt that the job stifled his creativity and disrupted his writing time. He felt disconnected and alienated. This story reflects that alienation.

The Narrator is in a job in which he helps people but doesn't feel like he makes any difference in their lives. He even imagines that they are in better circumstances than he is.

When he imagines the robbery, it is a reflection of his own soul. The job is "robbing" him of his joy and purpose in life. But he can't quit, because he depends on the creature comforts that it provides. He allows himself to be robbed again and again.


"Passersby"

Plot: The Narrator walks out at night and imagines that two people walking past him are either playing a game or one is robbing the other with the other chasing him.


Review: This is another one of Kafka's short stories that takes a brief time to reveal a mood. This one reflects The Narrator's paranoia. He goes from believing that the passersby are up to innocent pranksterish fun to believing something dark and disturbing about them.

There is also the fear connected with getting involved. As The Narrator fears one of the passersby is getting robbed, he wonders if it's his duty to help and what would happen if he doesn't. Instead of getting involved, he chooses to resist making that connection, even to potentially save someone's life. He would rather be alone and stew in his what if scenarios than reach out to a fellow human being.


"Unhappiness" 

Plot: A man enters his apartment and gets involved in a strange conversation with a child leaving the possibility that one or both of them are ghosts


Review: It is easy to see why the Kafkaesque world later appeared in other works including TV shows like The Prisoner and Twilight Zone. This story could have fit very easily into any incarnation of The Twilight Zone. (In fact variations of a ghostly child confronting an adult have appeared in Zone episodes like "Nightmare As A Child" and "What Are Friends For?".)

The conversations between The Narrator and The Ghost Child disturb the Narrator but there is something long lost and forgotten in them. The Ghost Child represents his lost innocence which disappeared as the Narrator matured and carried on the burdens of adulthood.

While The Ghost Child is physically dead, the Narrator is figuratively dead. He just floats along his life like a ghost unable to reach anyone or anything. The Ghost Child is the first real emotional connection that he has made.


Stories Published In Kafka's Lifetime


"The Judgement"

Plot: Georg Bendemann, a young businessman, writes a letter to his long distant friend telling him of his upcoming engagement to Frieda Bandenfeld. While visiting his father, the old man taunts Georg about his mother's death, his friendship, and his engagement. During this intense conversation, Mr. Bendemann gains more power and sentences his son to death "by drowning."


Review: This story is probably the most reminiscent of Kafka's real life. He dedicated this story to his then-lover, Felice Bauer who had the same initials as the fictional, Frieda Bandenfeld. While they were never engaged in real life, Kafka's correspondence with her was numerous and affectionate. Perhaps he thought of her as the one that got away.

There are also parallels between Georg and his father and Kafka and his father. Both their fathers were strict, severe, cold men that were hard to please. While Georg keeps swallowing his father's insults to the point that he feels overwhelmed by them, Kafka did not suffer his father's criticisms so lightly. He wrote a long detailed letter explaining why he was afraid of him. (It was published as "Letter to His Father.")

The final passage in which Georg is sentenced to drown is a metaphor for the control that his father has over his life. He suffocated him with his harsh words and cold behavior. Georg's own life slips away under the harsh cruelty of his father.

Because Kafka spent some time working in a job that he hated to help support his family, particularly his cold father, Kafka also felt like he was drowning. Unlike his fictional counterpart, Kafka managed to carve out a life for himself, albeit a short-lived one, through his writing. He finally in his own way silenced and diminished the role that his father had over him.

 

"The Metamorphosis"

Plot: A young man, Gregor Samsa wakes up to find that he has been transformed into a giant insect. His greedy soul sucking family are first terrified of him and then shun him leading to his demise.


Review: This and The Trial are probably Kafka's most famous works and it's easy to see why. "The Metamorphosis" covers a majority of Kafka's most common and prevalent themes.

The idea of a man turning into an insect could be something out of a B Horror film. But Kafka turned this concept into something terrifying and mesmerizing. 

As Gregor struggles to adjust to his transformation, it becomes apparent that he has already been dehumanized. His cruel father, money hungry mother, and spoiled sister, Grete, required him to work in a dull job to support them. They lived off of him like leeches until they bled him dry. As with most of Kafka's protagonists, he takes their emotional and financial abuse in stride. Even after he transforms, his main concerns are how it will affect his family and not, you know, that he is now an insect.

His father's abuse towards Gregor increases as the family finally gets off their lazy behinds and finds jobs. But Gregor's role has diminished. When he finds that his family no longer thinks of him as Gregor, the son that they lost, and refer to him as an insect or "it," he feels his life slip away and he is thrown out like any other insect. He has completely lost his humanity.

The final passage is a gut punch as the Reader becomes aware that his family has learned nothing from the experience. While on the tram both parents realize how attractive their daughter has become and that it's about time she found a husband. As if in mutual agreement, Grete, stretches herself in a sexy pose luring any approachable man. Now that they have lost Gregor, they want to find a new husband and son in law to live off of.


"In The Penal Colony"

Plot : An explorer visits a prison colony and observes the cruel instruments of torture and brutal sadistic behavior of the officer. He is helpless to stop the torture around him or to stop the Officer from dying by his own machine.


Review: This story is so gruesome because it's based on truth. There were many penal colonies, such as Devil's Island, in which prisoners were tortured by their guards.

There are many graphic moments, particularly that concern the torture machine that the Officer operates. He almost treats it like a lover or a cherished object with how lovingly he speaks about this machine that's sole objective is to hurt people. He even jealously guards the blueprints so only he can know how it works. He almost thinks of the torture as his God given right to inflict as his calling. He thinks of the prisoners as vermin who deserve to have inhumane treatment inflicted upon him.

Besides the torture itself, what stands out is the acceptance that the characters have towards this situation. Of course the Officer is too much in love with his work to bother. The Condemned Man, whose only crime is failing to salute a senior officer, has been so abused that he has lost the will to fight. A Soldier just placidly observes the action around him. Even the Explorer makes no move to stop the torture. His only action is to say that he will have a private conversation with the commandment. Release does not come until after the Officer has died by his own machine.

The numbness to the torture and cruelty has spread to all of the characters. Even the Explorer has that cruel sadistic streak in him. When he leaves by boat, he forces the Soldier and the Condemned Man to refrain from jumping into the boat. Though his cruelty is less obvious than the Officer, he shows his own brutal nature and that he too thinks of the Condemned Man as "The Other," someone who deserves to be isolated from society.


"Before the Law"

Plot: This is told in the style of a folktale. A man tries to gain admittance into a building called The Law but is denied by the doorkeeper. The man comes day after day with pleas, threats, bribes,  feigning friendship, until finally the doorkeeper lets him in revealing that the door was only for him at the right time.


Review: This is told in the style of a parable. The Law that the man wants to enter could be a court of law or a synagogue reflecting Jewish Law. The man cannot gain access for unexplained reasons except that it wasn't the right time. It is implied that the right time was during his death.

The man waits for years in front of the door, hoping to be good enough to access the knowledge within. It never occurs to him to leave the door alone or that some things are better left undiscovered. Instead he waits and tries to find ways to get inside, even feigning friendship with the doorman. The fact that he can only access the knowledge after death and the door was meant for him reveals that such knowledge will always be closed in one's lifetime. Some things are better left unlearned.


"Josephine The Singer, or The Mouse Folk"

Plot: Josephine's singing has a large following. Those who hear her are practically hypnotized. They consider her voice a relief from their misery and almost hold her up as an idol or fragile object. They ignore her humanity, personality, and other abilities for the only thing that they value from her: her voice.


Review: As a writer, Kafka was familiar with the struggles of artists and in Josephine's story, he recounts someone whose art is so profound that it has the power to move people for better or worse.

The mouse people are attracted to Josephine's voice because she offers them a sense of culture, entertainment, and a break from their humdrum lives. They are hypnotized by her singing and feel a deep connection to that voice.

Unfortunately, the admiration is not unanimous. Some don't believe that she can sing and that another is singing for her. Others think that she just whistles, like other mice, so isn't anything special. Others resent her because she doesn't do any hard labor. However, no one wants her to do any hard labor or be involved with the community. They only want her to sing.

Josephine's trajectory is like many stars who find fame, become accepted for their talent, are looked as above regular people, and then just as quickly are discarded and made the object of scorn. There is also an attack on commercialization of one's talent. Josephine just wants to share her singing ability, but her audience want to own her voice, control it, and keep it for themselves. They don't care about Josephine as a person and are unaware that she is lonely and her talent singles her out making her lonelier than ever. Just like anything else that is over commercialized and saturated, Josephine is found to be expendable and easily disposable.

Like many entertainers and artists, Josephine disappears young and used up. She is forgotten by the people who praised her singing but failed to know her. Instead they work as before waiting for another distraction to take up their time.


Stories Published Posthumously

 


"The Village Schoolmaster (The Giant Mole)"

Plot: A schoolteacher writes a pamphlet about a giant mole long believed as folklore in his village. He makes this study of the creature his life's work despite the mockery of others, particularly a young smarmy scholar. The Narrator attempts to fix the teacher's reputation by publishing a pamphlet based on his observations which leads to arguments between the two.


Review: This story remained unfinished and ended in a stalemate between the Schoolmaster and The Narrator but it also makes sense that it would end in such a manner. Two scholars bent on their own interpretations would be unable to find little in common with each other.

The story is about the interest scholars have in their subjects. The Schoolmaster forgoes the derision that others have in his pursuit of the Giant Mole. His research is the most important thing in his life and is at the expense of his others, even the Narrator's friendship.

When the Narrator publishes his own pamphlet, the Schoolmaster looks on it as competition as though the Narrator is forcing himself into his territory. He is possessive towards his pursuit of the Mole, considering the research belonging only to him. The research is an obsession in which he feels responsible and owns.



"The Hunter Gracchus"

Plot: In the Afterlife, the deceased Hunter Gracchus, gets into a conversation with the Burgomaster. He has been hunting on the ground and in the stars long enough and wants to be taken to the Other Side.


Review: It's hard to read this without thinking of Kafka being aware of his own impending demise. This almost reads like a Greek myth in which a dead man tries to cross the River Styx. 

Gracchus seems to live a wearying afterlife. While he was a hunter in life, his afterlife achieves little success. He is forced to continue his monotonous existence and hopes that the Burgomaster will lead him to an eternal rest. 

Perhaps as Kafka lay dying, he wanted to finally achieve rest from his personal demons and what he felt was a fruitless existence. He wrote about surreal unhappy things that he knew would continue after him. His final plea was that he could find the happiness after death that sometimes eluded him in life.


 

"The Truth About Sancho Panza"

Plot: A reworking of Don Quixote's famous loyal sidekick. Instead of humbly playing along with his friend's knightly fantasies, this short story suggests that he is encouraging his delusions to the point where he creates the character Don Quixote De La Mancha out of boredom and for his own sadistic entertainment.


Review: Who knew Franz Kafka was a fanfiction writer? Using his usual taste of dark situations, Kafka found a darker interpretation of the loyal friendship between Don Quixote and his faithful squire.

Instead Sancho is fully aware that his friend is delusional. He is the one who enables and encourages his pursuits. 

Similar to the Mouse Folk with Josephine, Sancho feels like he owns Quixote and pushes him for entertainment and amusement. Perhaps he considers Quixote's knightly quests as a relief from his otherwise dull life. He might also push his friend as a means of control and dominance.



"The Advocates"

Plot: The Narrator is on trial and is uncertain whether he has any advocates or defendants. He despairs when everyone seems to be judging him and he wishes that he could collect advocates.


Review: We continue with one of Kafka's favorite targets of criticism: the legal system. This story could have fit right in with The Trial. The Narrator is desperate to find advocates, anyone to defend or speak for him.

This story carries on the theme of loneliness as the Narrator can't find anyone who knows him well enough to defend him. The Narrator is so alone that he can't even defend himself. It is almost the opposite of "The Passersby" in which the Narrator feared getting involved with his fellow humans. In this case, The Narrator is the result of that lack of caring. He now stands alone victimized by the system which tries him.


"Investigations of a Dog"

Plot: A dog tells of his life. He gains an aptitude for music and compares himself to other dogs. He contemplates his own wild nature and wonders if humanity has suppressed it. He experiments with receiving food from humans. In embracing his music and ability to hunt, the Dog accepts his wild nature and freedom.


Review: Since Kafka wrote a lot about dehumanization, it makes sense that he would write about animals becoming more human.

In this case, the Dog is a creative logical creature. He uses his power of music to express his deeper feelings. Like an artist, he reveals his personal pain and struggles through song.

He also expresses an analytical mind as he studies how he receives food from humans. It's a clever twist on the scientific experiments that humans have often inflicted upon dogs.

Despite his logical and creative mind, much of which was adapted because of his involvement with humans, The Dog realizes that he cannot suppress his wild urges forever. When he joins a pack of dogs, it is a liberating and freeing experience for him. He is able to accept his bestial nature and leave the human training behind.



"The Burrow"

Plot: An agoraphobic misanthropic animal, possibly a mole or a badger marvels at the underground burrow that he has made to keep others out. As he goes over the various details, he fears the sounds of approaching animals.


Review: This was another unfinished story but what is there is a brilliant look at agoraphobia and misanthropy told from the point of view of an animal. The Narrator spends most of the time proud of his burrow describing every nook and cranny. It provides his food, shelter, defense, and all that is necessary. He uses it to keep the outside world away from him.

As he hears steps from what could be other animals, he is uncertain that what he hears are real or in his head. He fears the creatures outside so much that it has affected his senses. 

As much as he fears the outside world, he fears himself just as much. As he investigates his burrow, the Narrator both loves and hates his project. With his rejection of the outside world, he wonders if the burrow keeps him safe or holds him prisoner. Does it protect him from the outside world or keep him from it? Can a place be a sanctuary and a trap at the same time?


Franz Kafka certainly gave us plenty of stories that offered deep looks into the dark side of the human psyche. They aren't easy to read or interpret and cause one to feel a sense of bleakness and sadness about the world. However, they also provide a lot of thought and understanding.