The Japanese novelist Abe has often been compared to Kafka and this 1966 novel suggests an elegantly chilling postscript to The Metamorphosis.
Abes narrator is a scientist who has been hideously deformed in a laboratory accident, a man who has lost his face in a society where losing face is a synonym for humiliation.
Like an elegantly chilling postscript to The Metamorphosis , this classic of postwar Japanese literature describes a bizarre physical transformation that exposes the duplicities of an entire world.
The narrator is a scientist hideously deformed in a laboratory accident-a man who has lost his face and, with it, his connection to other people.
Even his wife is now repulsed by him.
His only entry back into the world is to create a mask so perfect as to be undetectable.
But soon he finds that such a mask is more than a disguise: it is an alternate self-a self that is capable of anything.
A remorseless meditation on nature, identity and the social contract, The Face of Another is an intellectual horror story of the highest order.
Aybars A351305
223.20 Lei
Harvard Business Review
122.76 Lei
Anne H. Zachry
94.58 Lei
William I. Woodson
208.08 Lei
Christian Mckay Heidicker
100.39 Lei