I don’t know if this is a stumbling block, but I had a real setback when I won a Nebula Award for the first story I ever had nominated for a Nebula in 1982. And you might think that was a good thing – and it was a wonderful thing, I don’t regret it a bit. But I was sort of discombobulated by it. John Kessel Read Quote
Since my first encounter with Kafka’s writing, I’ve been interested in a quality that, while he was alive, stood in the way of his achieving a large reputation: his allegory. John Kessel Read Quote
The conventional Aristotelian plot proceeds by means of a protagonist, an antagonist, and a series of events comprising a rising action, climax and denouement. John Kessel Read Quote
There must be a dozen films now based on Philip K. Dick novels or stories, far more than any other published science fiction writer. He’s sort of become the go-to guy for weird science fiction notions. John Kessel Read Quote
Kafka is not interested in documenting the manners and mores of any particular place; he is not interested in probing the psyche of individual characters. John Kessel Read Quote
Kafka’s inevitable tropism for the allegorical puts him in marked opposition to the realism that dominated the literary world of the first half of the 20th century. John Kessel Read Quote
One of the influences of Kafka over later writers is not so much in the content of his work as in its form. John Kessel Read Quote