Set in the troubled years of the end 1960s, when anti-establishment protests took over the world, it uses the Cold War tensions as the setting to a mysterious crime that may lead the reader to a forgotten - for a good reason - last Kafka´s manuscript.
I am passionate about this historical period, and I was pleased by the well-researched background, both political and emotional of those times.
There are so many books inspired by Kafka lately - as an individual, as a writer, as a creator of unique characters - and I can only wonder if the times we are living are really calling for it. In the case of Lovers of Franz K. the big question opening has to do with the ways in which the works of an author do belong to the public, even though they may not actually agree to disclose its content for various reasons. In an age of public disclosure and obsessive transparency, should one get involed in revoking decisions about one´s own work, no matter how famous and how relevant for the history of literature that person is?
So many questions and ideas that I am trying to understand right now, introduced to the reader under the disguise of a very well written political crime novel. A book that appeals very well both the crime readers and...well, the lovers of Franz K., obviously.
The book is published by Open Borders Press, an imprint of Orenda Books.
Rating: 5 stars
Disclaimer: Book offered as part of the book tour but the opinions are, as usual, my own
Thanks for the blog tour support x
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