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2013/12/26 Thursday

#16 Speaking of Kafka, Kafka for Kids!

Filed under: News — Staff @ 15:37:25

Unfortunately, a well-reasoned critique of consumer capitalism isn't enough to stop the tears of your betrayed loved ones when you have rightfully boycotted ¡ÈThe Holidays.¡É And while ¡Èplanting a tree in your name¡É seems to be entirely socially acceptable, ¡ÈI wrote your name on a rock and threw it at a cop¡É seems not to be.

¡ÈI don't want anything¡É seems to be equally taboo.

So, for all of those who have to shop for a critical theorist, radical or metaphysical asshole, you may behold the commodification of the revolution.

Read full article here:
http://www.critical-theory.com/critical-theory-gifts/

2013/12/12 Thursday

The 13 Best Children's, Illustrated, and Picture Books of 2013!

Filed under: News — Staff @ 9:09:32

Sylvia Plath believed it was never too early to dip children's toes in the vast body of literature. But to plunge straight into Kafka? Why not, which is precisely what Brooklyn-based writer and videogame designer Matthue Roth has done in My First Kafka: Runaways, Rodents, and Giant Bugs (public library) ¡½ a magnificent adaptation of Kafka for kids. With stunning black-and-white illustrations by London-based fine artist Rohan Daniel Eason, this gem falls ¡½ rises, rather ¡½ somewhere between Edward Gorey, Maurice Sendak, and the Graphic Canon series.
-Brain Pickings

Read the full article here:
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2013/12/09/best-childrens-books-2013/

2013/12/5 Thursday

Jewish review of Books

Filed under: News — Staff @ 11:07:02

My First Kafka is the quirky Hasidic writer and game designer Matthue Roth's attempt to bring Kafka to children without giving its young readers ¡Èunsettling dreams,¡É for which he enlists the ornate black-and-white illustrations of Rohan Daniel Eason. One of these volumes may change the course of Kafka studies forever, and the other will lull your children to sleep. But which is which?

Read the full article here:
http://jewishreviewofbooks.com/articles/622/kafka-at-bedtime/

2013/11/21 Thursday

Crunchyroll!

Filed under: News — Staff @ 12:52:22

One Peace Books, a publisher of English translations of Japanese literature, who is the latest English publisher of Crayon Shin-chan, and whose other manga include Yumiko Shirai's Tenken, and Doton Yamaaki's Breeth Deaply, has an edition of Takashi Ikeda's yuri manga Sasameki Koto being listed on Amazon. The 472-page Whispered Words localized collection is slated for a May, 2014 release.

Read the full article here:
http://www.crunchyroll.com/anime-news/2013/09/27-1/retailer-lists-one-peace-books-sasameki-koto-yuri-manga-release

2013/11/7 Thursday

Asia Eater: Fried Fish cakes

Filed under: News — Staff @ 14:02:10

“We recently received a beautiful little cookbook, Little Gift, from Japanese Wato. In it we found this recipe for fried fish cakes that we thought we'd share with you for the weekend.”

Read the full post here:
http://asia-eater.com/post/64366902881/fried-fish-cakes

2013/10/24 Thursday

Jewlicious

Filed under: News — Staff @ 14:18:15

Kids love scary stories. Scary and gory – the original Little Red Riding Hood was indeed gobbled up by the wolf. In Cinderella, the mean step-sisters actually cut off their toes in order to try to fit into the glass slipper. Hansel and Gretel threw an old lady into an oven – an old lady that was about to eat them! And this isn't confined to stories by the Brothers Grimm. We have the Dementors in Harry Potter which are some of the vilest creatures ever conceived in children's literature. We have the poor orphans in Lemony Snicket's Series of Unfortunate Events began their story with their parents being murdered. In ¡ÈThe Witches¡É by Roald Dahl, yet another set of parents is killed in a car accident. I could go on and on, but one thing tht's clear is that while these story lines are scary – they're not THAT scary.

Read full article here:
http://www.jewlicious.com/2013/07/my-first-kafka-by-matthue-roth/

2013/10/17 Thursday

Largehearted Boy

Filed under: News — Staff @ 16:33:59

In the Book Notes series, authors create and discuss a music playlist that relates in some way to their recently published book.

Previous contributors include Bret Easton Ellis, Kate Christensen, Kevin Brockmeier, George Pelecanos, Dana Spiotta, Amy Bloom, Aimee Bender, Myla Goldberg, Heidi Julavits, Hari Kunzru, and many others.

Mattue Roth's My First Kafka is truly a children's book for all ages. Roth's faithfully dark and clever reworkings of three Franz Kafka stories combined with Rohan Daniel Eason's black and white illustrations make this a book the whole family will enjoy.

Wired wrote of the book:

“The haunting black-and-white sketches paired with Roth's elegant verses do justice to the sense of foreboding Kafka was so good at crafting.”

Stream a Spotify playlist of these tunes. If you don't have Spotify yet, sign up for the free service.

In his own words, here is Matthue Roth's Book Notes music playlist for his children's book, My First Kafka:

“Innocent When You Dream,” Tom Waits

To be incredibly immodest: This is probably the perfect worst lullaby to play your kids, and My First Kafka might be the perfect worst bedtime story. Which is to say, kids will probably love both, and understand both — probably better than adults do. “Running through the graveyard, we laughed, my friends and I,” he sings, melancholy and playful at once. “We swore we'd be together until the day we died.” Kids get sadness. But to them, sadness isn't completely separate from humor. In fact, reportedly, Kafka thought his own stories were hilarious; he'd read them aloud to his friends and collapse in laughter. So let's open with a lullaby. And then let's crank the music up.

Read the full article:
http://www.largeheartedboy.com/blog/archive/2013/10/book_notes_matt_23.html

2013/10/10 Thursday

Forbes!

Filed under: News — Staff @ 12:43:50

…Matthue Roth, one of Amplify's head writers and game developers. I already knew a bit about Roth. His children's book, My First Kafka, is one of my boys' favorites. I've also read Roth's novel, Never Mind The Goldbergs–a story about a teenaged girl who finds her foundation for countercultural rebellion in observant Judaism. The novel is a thought-provoking exploration of the relationship between orthodoxy, individuality, and conformity. Roth's Amazon author page describes him as ¡Èa Hasidic author¡É and ¡Èslam poet,¡É hardly in resonance with the stereotypical view we may have of the News Corp lemming. (Come to think of it, Roth is hardly in resonance with the stereotypical view we have of anything).

read the full article here:
http://www.forbes.com/sites/jordanshapiro/2013/09/30/what-we-can-learn-from-rupert-murdoch-news-corp-and-amplify/

2013/10/3 Thursday

Hey, Adults!: The Austin Chronicle on Superzelda

Filed under: News — Staff @ 13:22:37

Let me admit: I didn't know much about Zelda Fitzgerald before reading Superzelda. I somehow avoided reading The Great Gatsby in high school, and only knew her as a character of some note from the flapper era, married to F. Scott Fitzgerald. So, Superzelda (from the husband-and-wife team of Tiziana Lo Porto and Daniele Marotta) both delighted and saddened me as I learned more about the subject.

Read the full article here:
http://www.austinchronicle.com/gyrobase/m/Blogs?oid=1473172

2013/9/19 Thursday

Jewish Book Council

Filed under: News — Staff @ 7:56:29

A children's Kafka seems somewhat…well… errr…Kafkaesque. But, truth be told, children do live in a world where the unexpected is pretty much expected; it's all quite new and not-yet-experienced and it must seem somewhat random and strange. Kafka himself was writing for the preverbal, not-yet-logical, completely experiential child in all of us. So maybe this book makes more sense than one might think at first glance. It's a retelling of some of Kafka's tales, most notably The Metamorphosis, in simple but poetic form accompanied by stark black and white, expressive, and very humorous illustrations. Kafka's eerie, creepy, wondrous but matter-of-fact mood is well conveyed and the language is simultaneously simple and sophisticated. This would make an unusual but highly effective read-aloud and would provoke all kinds of discussion with a child about reality, imagination, nightmares, and perception. It's offbeat, way off the beaten track and startlingly, refreshingly, original. Recommended for ages five and up and for parents who love sharing the darker side of reality.

Read here:
http://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/book/my-first-kafka?A=SearchResult&SearchID=5037916&ObjectID=6193006&ObjectType=35

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