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A collection of brand-new short stories written by prize-winning, bestselling writers and inspired by Kafka – published to commemorate the centenary of his death

*Chosen as a 2024 highlight in the Guardian, the Financial Times, the Daily Mail, New Statesman, Esquire and the New European*

Franz Kafka is widely regarded as one of the great geniuses of twentieth-century literature. What happens when some of the most original literary minds of today take an idea, a mood or a line from his work and use it to spark something new?

From a future society who ask their AI servants to construct a giant tower to reach God; to a flat hunt that descends into a comically absurd bureaucratic nightmare; to a population experiencing a wave of unbearable, contagious panic attacks, these ten specially commissioned stories are by turns mind-bending, funny, unsettling and haunting. Inspired by the visionary imagination of a writer working one hundred years ago, they speak powerfully to the strangeness of being alive today.

Reviews

Glamour
A kaleidoscope of Kafkaesque tales woven by a brilliant and diverse array of renowned and talented authors ... Readers are treated to a rich tapestry of narratives, each as captivating as it is thought-provoking
Publishers Weekly
This inspired anthology demonstrates the enduring influence of Franz Kafka's fatalistic worldview and mordant humour ... These stories will do the trick for the Kafka-curious and diehard fans alike
The Millions
A boon for Kafkaheads everywhere
Daily Mail
Unsettling and uneasy ... brimful of the dark claustrophobia that made Kafka's work so startling and suffocating
BookPage
Mind-bending and consistently enjoyable ... A Cage Went in Search of a Bird is a roller coaster ride that will delight the adventuresome reader ... It's easy to imagine Kafka paging through these varied and deeply imagined tales and nodding in admiration
Poets & Writers
Offer narratives of baffling circumscriptions, illnesses, miscommunications, and technologies. But the stories also make space for potentiality, with characters witnessing change or glimpsing future possibilities - putting Kafka's turn-of-the-century disillusionment into conversation with our own
Financial Times
Eerie, darkly comic, vertiginously varied ... a refreshing range of responses to the absurdist nature of modern life
Shelf Awareness
The writing in this collection is deft, self-referential, horrifying, and funny. In one story, the protagonist asks 'just who, and what, is a museum for? And [are] we really ready to have this conversation?' Here readers can ask, who is Kafka for? A Cage Went in Search of a Bird is ready to have that very conversation
Harper's Bazaar
A glorious new collection of short stories inspired by the angst-ridden absurdism of the Czech writer
i-paper
This collection is quite the achievement ... both ridiculous and brilliant. Thank goodness it exists. Kafka himself would love it