Challenge Corner discussion
This topic is about
The Metamorphosis
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The Metamorphosis, by Franz Kafka - Starting January 3rd 2019
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Hey, I was planning on reading
! Would anyone be interested in joining me for the other stories as well? Otherwise I’ll join you for The Metamorphosis and read the other stories on my own.
Caroline wrote: "Hey, I was planning on reading
! Would anyone be interested in joining me for the other stories as well? Otherwise I’ll join you for The Metamorp..."I may join you depending on how I like this one. I'm behind but hope to start this today.
Charley Girl wrote: "I may join you depending on how I like this one. I'm behind but hope to start this today. "Okay, let me know!
Caroline wrote: "Hey, I was planning on reading
! Would anyone be interested in joining me for the other stories as well? Otherwise I’ll join you for The Metamorp..."I can't find this exact book. What other stories is in it?
Oh, it didn't occur to me the collection might be hard to find! That could definitely make it hard to BR!Besides The Metamorphosis, it has A Message from the Emperor, The Judgment, The Stoker: A Fragment, In the Penal Colony, A Country Doctor, An Old Leaf, A Hunger Artist, Josephine the Singer, and Before the Law.
If you are able to find any of those, I would love to hear what you think of them! I especially liked In the Penal Colony and A Hunger Artist.
Caroline wrote: "Oh, it didn't occur to me the collection might be hard to find! That could definitely make it hard to BR!Besides The Metamorphosis, it has A Message from the Emperor, The Judgment, The Stoker: A ..."
I didn't realize it was a dollar. I bought it and will request the BR now for today! Thanks Caroline!
Books mentioned in this topic
The Metamorphosis and Other Stories (other topics)The Metamorphosis and Other Stories (other topics)
The Metamorphosis and Other Stories (other topics)


“A brilliant illustrated adaptation of Franz Kafka’s famous story. It’s a real pleasure to read and one in which everyone will recognize the existential drama and uncanny wit of the original text."—Susan Bernstein, associate professor of comparative literature and German studies, Brown University