Fascinating and forensically scrupulous. -- John Banville (The Guardian) Dramatic and illuminating.raises momentous questions about nationality, religion, literature, and even the Holocaust. -- Adam Kirsch (The Atlantic) Thoughtful and provocative. -- Ruth Franklin (Wall Street Journal) A gifted cultural historian with a scholarly sensibility. -- Lev Mendes (New York Times Book Review) Absorbing.Balint elegantly intercuts courtroom scenes with episodes from Kafka's biography and cultural afterlife. He brings out every paradox of a judicial process that tried to tie down this most ambivalent of authors, the ultimate 'disaffiliated pariah,' to a fixed identity.
Balint's scrupulous and sardonic prose makes you love Kafka, and dread the law. -- The Economist A tale pitting two Goliaths against one octogenarian David, untangled in exacting, riveting detail.A must-read. -- Rebecca Schuman (Slate) Though Benjamin Balint's masterful hunt for Kafka's rightful ownership begins as a local dispute in an Israeli family court, it soon thickens into modernity's most bitterly contentious cultural conundrum. Who should inherit Franz Kafka? The woman into whose hands his manuscripts fortuitously fell? Germany, the nation that murdered his sisters but claims his spirit? Israel, asserting a sovereign yet intimate ancestral right? Searing questions of language, of personal bequest, of friendship, of biographical evidence, of national pride, of justice, of deceit and betrayal, even of metaphysical allegiance, burn through Balint's scrupulous trackings of Kafka's final standing before the law. -- Cynthia Ozick, author of Foreign Bodies Thrilling and profound, Kafka's Last Trial shines new light not only on the greatest writer of the twentieth century and the fate of his work, but also on the larger question of who owns art or has a right to claim guardianship of it. Benjamin Balint combines the sharp eye of the courtroom journalist with the keen meditations of a literary and cultural thinker, and his research and lively intelligence deliver insights on every page. -- Nicole Krauss, author of Forest Dark Kafka's Last Trial is a fascinating inquiry into--and meditation on--the nature of artistic genius and the proprietary claims any one individual or country has on the legacy of that genius.
Benjamin Balint is both a superb investigative journalist and a gifted cultural critic. This is that rarest of books: a scholarly work that is also compulsively readable. -- Daphne Merkin, author of This Close to Happy Superb.Beautifully crafted, with just the right ratios of empirical-legal information, intellectual history, critical awareness of Kafka and his work, and wise reflection. It is obviously the product of admirably patient research and rare dedication to quality control. -- Stanley A. Corngold, Professor Emeritus of German and Comparative Literature, Princeton University.