The Trial: The Original 1925 Unabridged and Complete - Classic Illustrated Edition

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Published Feb 19, 2024

259 pages

Average rating: 7.75

16 RATINGS

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Club Des Lecteurs

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Gen Z and Millennials Read the Classics

Gen Z and Millennials Read the Classics is a New York City-based book

club focusing on classic literature. Our goal is to offer a space where

younger generations can engage with timeless works, finding contemporary

relevance in stories that have shaped literary history. And in the

process connect with others of course!


Every month, we will gather in various quiet corners of the city, from

established bookstores, to cafes, to parks, aiming to discuss and

dissect works by authors like Jane Austen, F. Scott Fitzgerald,

Dostoevsky, Joyce, and many more. While a focus is on reading and

discussion, the club also serves as a space for its members to connect

and form meaningful friendships, grounded in a mutual love and discovery

of literature.


For those interested in exploring classic literature or seeking a

community of like-minded readers in NYC, Gen Z and Millennials Read the

Classics offers a calm, introspective space to finally get around to

engaging with and learning about all the classics we've vaguely heard

about, and connect with others in the process!

Community Reviews

AlephKaan
Jan 25, 2026
8/10 stars
This book is hard to rate or even review. First of all, we’re dealing with an unfinished work — full of fragments and uncertainties about what Kafka actually intended to do with it.

How can we even be sure that the ending is the ending? Now, I know, this story doesn't need an end, because it is a timeless topic and it's not its purpose to have an end. It only makes you hope that one day, maybe, the system will become fair.

As for the "story" itself :
For me, it felt a bit like Alice in Wonderland, except that here, K. (our “Alice”) quickly gives in to the absurd and lets himself drown in this surreal, dystopian, and nonsensical world.

It also reads almost like a manuscript for a play — and I’m quite sure that was intentional, meant to portray K.’s world as a vast tragicomedy, with every character exaggerated to the point of absurdity. There are a lot of references to the theater (the tenors, going to the theater with his uncle, being in the backstage of the procedural world, etc) that helps confirm my theory.

Going back to my Alice in Wonderland comparison, each person feels like one of those fantastical, unfathomable creatures from another realm, guiding (or misleading) K. through their strange domain.
Nobody felt real, no one because who is the system ? Does it need a face, a body...?

I would not go on and on about what the book is really about, other people did already, and surely better than I would, but being accused and the judged for just existing is something that a lot of people can relate to, and history shows us that we never learn our lessons.

As for the prose :

There are great, philosophical quotes here and there, you should keep in mind. If anything needs to live "rent free" in your head, please choose those phrases.

But one thing is certain: the prose is both heavy and childlike. I’m not sure whether that was intentional or not, but if anyone else had written this way, I’m pretty sure readers would have thrown the book at their face.

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