Wish you were here Postcards from Franz Kafka

Bernadette Watts

Book - 2024

"While strolling through the park, Franz Kafka hears the cry of a young girl named Saskia sitting with her mother. When Franz learns that the child has lost her beloved doll, Christiana, Franz reassures her that her doll is traveling the world. Upon their next fortuitous meetings, Franz presents Saskia and her mother with postcards from the lost doll--one from Paris, another from Venice, and finally one from Egypt. When Saskia insists that her doll Christiana come home from her travels, Franz is distraught until he finds a vintage doll in a secondhand shop. Saskia is skeptical--the doll looks old. But when Franz reminds her that we all age from our amazing journeys through life, her heart bursts with joy at their being reunited."-...-Amazon.

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Children's Room New Shelf Show me where

jE/Watts
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room New Shelf jE/Watts (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : NorthSouth [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Bernadette Watts (author)
Item Description
"First published in Switzerland in 2023 by NordSud Verlag under the title Hippe Hexen und ibre zauberhaften Tiere"--Colophon.
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 29 cm
ISBN
9780735845565
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In a tale spun from truth, a kind writer helps a child keep in touch with her lost doll. As the story goes (related years later by a friend of the writer), once when Franz Kafka was walking in a Berlin park, he met a mother whose child, Saskia, was in tears. Learning that the child had lost her doll Christiana, he began bringing her postcards he'd gathered in his travels with notes from the doll about her visits to places such as Paris and Venice. The original missives being lost, Watts follows Larissa Theule--author ofKafka and the Doll (2021), illustrated by Rebecca Green--in crafting imagined ones…and in adding both names and a tidier ending of her own. Here, Franz finds a doll in a secondhand shop and oversees a joyful reunion just before he dies (offstage) from pneumonia: "'No,' said her mother. 'We will not meet Franz again. He has gone to another place.'" (Though Saskia initially notices that Christiana looks different, Franz explains that the doll's travels have aged her.) The spare but emotional tale will charm readers; they'll pore over the lavishly detailed scenes of the solitary writer's apartment, packed with mementos and domestic items, as well as views of small figures strolling wide European streets and of the errant doll posing with landmarks such as the Eiffel Tower in the background scenes. The cast is light-skinned throughout. Sensitive, tender, and gorgeously illustrated. (afterword)(Picture book. 6-9) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.