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Letters to Milena

1952 book


1952 book

FieldValue
nameLetters to Milena
title_origBriefe an Milena
translatorTania and James Stern (1st edition); Philip Boehm (2nd edition)
imageLetters to Milena.jpg
captionFirst edition
authorFranz Kafka
languageGerman
genreLetters
publisherSchocken Books
release_date1952 (1st), 1986 (2nd)
english_release_date1953 (1st), 1990 (2nd)
media_typePrint, hard and paperback
pages298 p.
isbn0-8052-0885-2
dewey833/.912 B 19
congressPT2621.A26 Z48613 1990
oclc19814322

Letters to Milena is a book collecting some of Franz Kafka's letters to Milena Jesenská from 1920 to 1923. The English translation of the letters states, "Whereas Kafka generally wrote to Milena in German, most of her letters were in her mother tongue" of Czech (p. xvii).

Publication history

The letters were originally published in German in 1952 as Briefe an Milena, edited by Willy Haas, who deleted some passages that he thought might hurt people who were still living at the time. The collection was first published in English by Schocken Books in 1953, translated by Tania and James Stern. A new German edition, restoring the passages Haas had deleted, was published in 1983, followed by a new English translation by Philip Boehm in 1990. This edition includes some of Milena's letters to Max Brod, as well as four essays she wrote and her obituary for Kafka.

Quote

The easy possibility of writing letters must have brought wrack and ruin to the souls of the world. Writing letters is actually an intercourse with ghosts, and by no means just the ghost of the addressee but also with one's own ghost, which secretly evolves inside the letter one is writing. (p. ix)

References

  • Kafka, Franz. Letters to Milena. Translated by Philip Boehm, New York: Schocken Books, 1990.
  • Estima, Christine. Letters to Kafka. Toronto: House of Anansi Press, 2025. ISBN 9781487013318

References

  1. Estima, Christine. (September 9, 2025). "8 Books That Explore the Love Letters of Literary Icons".
  2. (August 21, 2025). "50 Canadian fiction books we're excited about this fall".
  3. (July 3, 2025). "Book review of ''Letters to Kafka''".
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