Never before published in English, the stories in Mr. Kafka and Other
Tales from the Time of the Cult were written mostly in the 1950s and
present the Czech master Bohumil Hrabal at the height of his powers. The
stories capture a time when Czech Stalinists were turning society upside
down, inflicting their social and political experiments on mostly
unwilling subjects. These stories are set variously in the gas-lit
streets of post-war Prague; on the raucous and dangerous factory floor
of the famous Poldi steelworks where Hrabal himself once worked; in a
cacophonous open-air dance hall where classical and popular music come
to blows; at the basement studio where a crazed artist attempts to
fashion a national icon; on the scaffolding around a decommissioned
church. Hrabal captures men and women trapped in an eerily beautiful
nightmare, longing for a world where "humor and metaphysical escape can
reign supreme."