The Trial [Tantor Audio] Audiobook By Franz Kafka cover art

The Trial [Tantor Audio]

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The Trial [Tantor Audio]

By: Franz Kafka
Narrated by: Todd McLaren
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First published in 1925, The Trial tells the story of a man arrested for an unknown crime by a remote, inaccessible authority and his struggle for control over the increasing absurdity of his life. One of Franz Kafka's best-known works, The Trial has been variously interpreted as an examination of political power, a satirical depiction of bureaucracy, and a pessimistic religious parable. Left unfinished at the time of Kafka's 1924 death, The Trial is nevertheless a trenchant depiction of the seemingly incomprehensible nature of existence and a fascinating exploration of the universal issues of justice, power, freedom, and isolation.

Public Domain (P)2011 Tantor
Alternate History Classics Genre Fiction Literary Fiction Science Fiction Suspense Thriller & Suspense Fiction Witty European Fantasy

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Classic Story • Brilliant Concept • Excellent Narrator • Thought-provoking Protagonist • Sardonic Wit • Solid Pacing

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Franz Kafka's The Trial is a classic depiction of the cold indifference of modern society. A mid level bank employee is accused of a crime, although he is never told the nature of that crime. He endures an opaque and labyrinthine system that is completely uninterpretable and unnavigable to an outsider and seems solely designed to serve and sustain the system. Along the way, he encounter others in the system and deals with lawyers who are equally intent on perpetuating the impenetrability the whole affair. While he suffers throughout from cold, unfeeling inscrutable system, his fate is sealed and in the end, he never even learns the original instigating cause of his demise.

Kafka explores the downsides to large, complex structures necessitated by large populations, in essence the evolving issues with modern life. No one individual has the big picture, no one has all the details, and no one has any responsibilities or accountability beyond carrying out their specific tasks. While everyone can empathize with K, Kafka manages to string together a story in the extreme that highlights the problems dealing with large groups of people.

The narration is adequate with reasonable character distinction and solid pacing. While not long, be prepared to be frustrated by the continual injustices experienced at every turn.

Classic indifference in modern society

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The narrator spoke characters’ lines without depth or feeling. The often mechanical reading offered by the narrator dulled any hopes of immersion in the content.

Poor performance weakens the story

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As if we get to see Karla’s workbook; the writing is good with interesting concepts, but frustrating in terms of concluding plot lines. More of a Ted Talk than a story but glad to have finished and discovered for myself what many call one of the best fiction stories of all time… sort of.

Unreslolved but Niche and Interesting

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It was an interesting story. I kept reminding myself that it was a story of an older time. At times I felt like it was an explanation of our court system and the flaws it has. Other times I felt like it was just a shakedown of people that wanted power for the sake of power. I was rooting for the protagonist through most of the book, but started to want him to fail and saw him as someone who should be found guilty. The ending was very mediocre, felt rushed, and I don't feel like there was any real conclusion with missing information. I understand this could be because Kafka died before this book was finished, which might be the issue with it's ending.

Good context, terrible ending

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The main character is this book is a self-absorbed, self-righteous twat who can't be bothered to consider anything beyond own reprehensible understanding of reality. I think the reason he never discovered what he was being accused of is because he never let anyone else speak. We are given an insinuation of his crime and his reaction alone should be enough to convict him. By the end of the book I was rooting for the court system to shut him up and nearly cheered at the ending.

Given all of that, both the trial and the court system were utterly ridiculous, particularly given that they seemed to have no power to force anyone to do anything that wasn't voluntary in some way.

Self-absorbed twat gets caught up in absurd trial

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