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  1. ISBN. 0-8052-3500-0. Letters to Felice is a book collecting some of Franz Kafka 's letters to Felice Bauer from 1912 to 1917. Schocken Books acquired these letters from Felice Bauer in 1955, in addition to roughly half of Kafka's letters to Grete Bloch, Bauer's friend.

    • Franz Kafka, Felice Bauer
    • 1967
    • Franz Kafka, Felice Bauer
    • 1967
    • “You are at once both the quiet and the confusion of my heart; imagine my heartbeat when you are in this state.” ― Franz Kafka, Letters to Felice.
    • “I am not well; I could have built the Pyramids with the effort it takes me to cling on to life and reason.” ― Franz Kafka, Letters to Felice.
    • “It certainly was not my intention to make you suffer, yet i have done so; obviously it never will be my intention to make you suffer, yet I shall always do so.”
    • “Nothing unites two people so completely, especially if, like you and me, all they have is words.” ― Franz Kafka, Letters to Felice.
  2. Feb 5, 2015 · Five hundred of his letters survive and were posthumously published in the intensely rewarding and revelatory Letters to Felice (public library). In November of 1912, three months after he met Felice, Kafka writes: Fräulein Felice!

  3. 4.19. 973 ratings105 reviews. Franz Kafka met Felice Bauer in August 1912, at the home of his friend Max Brod. Energetic, down-to-earth, and life-affirming, the twenty-five-year-old secretary was everything Kafka was not, and he was instantly smitten.

    • (973)
    • Paperback
  4. Sep 30, 1973 · Kafka's “Letters to Felice” does not offer the most surprising of these revelations—we already knew too much about him—hut surely the most painful, surpassing the new “Waste Land” in the...

  5. Sep 13, 2022 · Letters to Felice. by. Kafka, Franz, 1883-1924. Publication date. 1973. Topics. Kafka, Franz, 1883-1924 -- Correspondence, Bauer, Felice, 1887-1960, Authors, Austrian -- 20th century -- Correspondence. Publisher. New York, Schocken Books.

  6. Praise. “Some of the most heartrending ‘love letters’ ever written.”. —Morris Dickstein, The New York Times Book Review. “Kafka’s correspondence with Felice has all the earmarks of his fiction—the same nervous attention to minute particulars, the same paranoid awareness of shifting balances of power, the same atmosphere of ...

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