**The passionate but doomed epistolary love affair between a Czech
translator and one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century, the
author of The Metamorphosis and *The Trial.
*
"Extraordinary...touching, horrifying, brilliant, sickly, [and]
heartbreaking.... The most significant key we have for a reading of the
author's novels and short stories." --*The New York Times
In no other work does Franz Kafka reveal himself as in Letters to
Milena, which begins as a business correspondence but soon develops into
an epistolary love affair. Kafka's Czech translator, Milena Jesenská,
was a gifted and charismatic twenty-three-year-old who was uniquely able
to recognize Kafka's complex genius and his even more complex character.
For thirty-six-year-old Kafka, she was "a living fire, such as I have
never seen." It was to Milena that he revealed his most intimate self
and, eventually, entrusted his diaries for safekeeping.