One of my friend Yamin , a kindly young boy from Kashmir whom I met in kota, once told me not to bother reading boring books. "There are too many good books out there," He  said, "to waste your time reading something you're not enjoying."

 

It was great advice, which I still adhere to almost 2 years later. Of course, I also understood that he was talking about our personal reading preferences, as opposed to what we were assigned to read as students. In the course of my education, I had to read a lot of stories that I would otherwise not have entertained had my grade not been on the line. I came to equate—as so many students do—school reading with boring reading.

 

That was all before I read Franz Kafka's The Metamorphosis. 

 

"As Gregor Samsa awoke from unsettling dreams one morning, he found himself transformed in his bed into a monstrous vermin. He lay on his hard armorlike back and when he raised his head a little he saw his vaulted brown belly divided into sections by stiff arches from whose height the coverlet had already slipped and was about to slide off completely."
                                 -Franz Kafka, 'The Metamorphosis' (Translated by: Donna Freed) 

There I was, in my bedroom, reading about this man, Gregor Samsa, who woke up one morning and found himself transformed into a giant cockroach! (Note to reader: The Metamorphosis has been translated several times and in the first version I read Gregor Samsa was transformed into a "cockroach," as opposed to an "insect" or "vermin.") Of course, my immediate thought was that Kafka was speaking metaphorically and Gregor simply felt like a cockroach. But, as I read on, I discovered that Gregor actually had transformed. And, while there are plenty of metaphorical implications in the subtext, it was, on its surface, a story about a man who turned into an cockroach. 


When I  encountered The Metamorphosis about 2 months ago , I felt like I'd discovered some wonderful secret, some hidden gem buried in my otherwise boring textbook. Perhaps because I was so excited about The Metamorphosis, I sort of  saw dreams fo the book a multiple times. Soon thereafter, I ended up writing my first blog, analyzing this great novel. I don't really need the extra points, I just don't want to stop talking about it.

"He would have needed arms and hands to prop himself up, instead of which he had only the many little legs that continually waved every which way and which he could not control at all. If he wanted to bend one, it was the first to stretch itself out, and if he finally succeeded in getting this leg to do what he wanted, the others in the meantime, as if set free, waved all the more wildly in painful and frenzied agitation."

-Franz Kafka, 'The Metamorphosis' (Translated By: Donna Freed)


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The Metamorphosis ( Summary )