Ein Landarzt: Kleine Erzählungen by Franz Kafka
The Story
This isn't one long story, but a bunch of short, sharp shocks. The title tale, 'A Country Doctor,' sets the tone: a doctor is called out on a stormy night on a fake errand, his horse dies, and he's whisked away by mysterious horses to a patient with a terrible wound. He's helpless, everything is urgent yet pointless, and he can never get back home. Other stories follow similar logic—a man turns into a giant bug, a hunger artist starves himself for a public that stops caring, a singing mouse gives a lecture. The plots are simple, but the feeling they leave you with is deeply, wonderfully complicated.
Why You Should Read It
Kafka has a way of naming a feeling we all know but can't describe. That anxiety of being late for something important, the frustration of endless, nonsensical rules, the loneliness of being utterly misunderstood. His characters are often good people trapped in impossible situations, just trying to do their job or make sense of things. Reading him is like seeing your own minor frustrations reflected in a funhouse mirror—distorted, exaggerated, but weirdly true. It's not depressing; it's actually liberating to see it all laid out so clearly.
Final Verdict
Perfect for anyone who likes their fiction a little strange and thought-provoking. If you enjoy the eerie vibes of shows like 'The Twilight Zone' or the thoughtful puzzles of authors like Haruki Murakami, you'll find a friend in Kafka. Don't go in expecting cozy comfort reading. Go in ready for a short, intense, and brilliant exploration of the quiet chaos of being human. It's a classic for a reason.
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Richard Williams
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