"A sensational new book [that] reveals these hitherto hidden artworks for the first time . . . This valuable volume allows us to see how, for Kafka, word and image walk arm in arm."–Benjamin Balint,
Jewish Review of Books "The uncanny animatedness, that which strikes us in Kafka's prose even before we are enraptured by its depths, lives everywhere in the evidence of his hand. It lives in his cursive script, in these faces and bodies and windswept horses, in these self-portraits we encounter having somehow always known he was there, staring into us, waiting to be seen."–Jonathan Lethem, author of
The Fortress of Solitude "An important and original book. Informative and perceptive, it illuminates a side of Kafka that has hitherto scarcely been known."–Ritchie Robertson, author of
Kafka: A Very Short Introduction "Kafka, this absorbing book shows, was both artist and art-lover: inspired by Asian art, he explored line in defiance of gravity, drawing as a counterpoint to script. An intriguing volume, with Butler's essay as the highlight."–Katie Trumpener, Yale University