What We Are Reading Today: ‘A Hunger Artist’

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Updated 09 November 2024

What We Are Reading Today: ‘A Hunger Artist’

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  • Kafka’s exploration of the artist’s suffering is a metaphor for the broader human experience — where the search for authenticity and recognition often leads to despair and isolation

Author: Franz Kafka

“A Hunger Artist” is a novella by Franz Kafka, which was published in 1922.

The narrative follows a professional hunger artist whose act is to fast for extended periods, presenting his art as a spectacle for an audience.

Initially, his performances drew significant attention, and he became a celebrated figure, embodying the artist’s struggle against societal norms and expectations.

As the story progresses, the artist’s popularity wanes, and he becomes increasingly alienated.

The public’s fascination shifts to more modern forms of entertainment, and the hunger artist becomes a relic of a bygone era.

The hunger artist’s ultimate fate is tragic. Despite his dedication to his craft, he becomes a victim of societal indifference.

The book is a poignant 14-page short story that delves into themes of art, isolation, and the quest for meaning.

Kafka’s exploration of the artist’s suffering is a metaphor for the broader human experience — where the search for authenticity and recognition often leads to despair and isolation.

He masterfully captures the conflict between the artist’s inner world and external interpretations, demonstrating the need to understand and appreciate real creative expression.

The story culminates in the realization that true artistry is frequently unrecognized and undervalued.

In “A Hunger Artist,” Kafka crafts a powerful commentary on the complexities of identity, the ephemeral nature of fame, and the often lonely path of the artist, making it a compelling and thought-provoking work that resonates with anyone grappling with the meaning of creativity and existence.

His prose is spare yet evocative, employing a surreal tone that enhances the existential themes.

The story challenges readers to consider the nature of art, the role of the audience, and the sacrifices artists make for their craft.

Kafka is renowned for his surreal and existential narratives that still resonate with readers more than a century later. His best-known works include “The Metamorphosis,” “The Trial,” and “The Castle.”


What We Are Reading Today: Seven Rivers by Vanessa Taylor

What We Are Reading Today: Seven Rivers by Vanessa Taylor
Updated 14 October 2025

What We Are Reading Today: Seven Rivers by Vanessa Taylor

What We Are Reading Today: Seven Rivers by Vanessa Taylor

Vanessa Taylor’s “Seven Rivers” tells the story of the Nile, Danube, Niger, Mississippi, Ganges, Yangtze and the Thames.

At its heart are the empire-builders of the Chinese dynasties, Romans and Hindus and their river gods, the Habsburgs and Ottomans, Mughal emperors, the people of the Niger from Mali’s golden age to today, struggles of life and death on the Mississippi, and the dethroning of the British on the rivers of their unruly imperial subjects.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘I Was Working: Poems’ by Ariel Yelen

What We Are Reading Today: ‘I Was Working: Poems’ by Ariel Yelen
Updated 13 October 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘I Was Working: Poems’ by Ariel Yelen

What We Are Reading Today: ‘I Was Working: Poems’ by Ariel Yelen

Seeking to find a song of the self that can survive or even thrive amid the mundane routines of work, Ariel Yelen’s lyrics include wry reflections on the absurdities and abjection of being a poet who is also an office worker and commuter in New York.

In the poems’ dialogues between labor and autonomy, the beeping of a microwave in the staff lounge becomes an opportunity for song. 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Beyond Anxiety’

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Updated 12 October 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Beyond Anxiety’

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  • The book suggests that personal regulation and social well-being are intertwined: Cultivating creativity and connection at the individual level contributes to healthier communities and more humane institutions

Martha Beck’s “Beyond Anxiety: Curiosity, Creativity and Finding Your Life’s Purpose” examines why modern life leaves so many people on edge and proposes a clear, practical route out of chronic worry.

Rather than treating anxiety as a defect to eliminate, Beck reframes it as a misdirected guidance system. She contrasts the “anxiety spiral,” a loop that keeps the body in threat mode, with a “creativity spiral” that restores flexibility, connection and purposeful action.

The book’s strength lies in its accessibility. The author distills neuroscience into plain language and focuses on short practices that fit into daily routines.

It invites readers to interrupt worry loops through curiosity, sensory grounding and playful problem-solving. These micro-exercises shift attention from scanning for danger to exploring options, gradually teaching the nervous system how to settle.

A social perspective complements the individual guidance. Drawing on ideas akin to Max Weber’s “iron cage,” Beck argues that systems built on speed, metrics, and profit amplify vigilance and crowd out meaning.

The book suggests that personal regulation and social well-being are intertwined: Cultivating creativity and connection at the individual level contributes to healthier communities and more humane institutions.

I appreciate how practical it is — offering prompts for five-minute experiments, reflections that encourage noticing small changes and gentle checkpoints that prevent perfectionism from derailing progress.

Newcomers will find plain language and doable routines; experienced readers may recognize familiar ideas but will appreciate the renewed emphasis on creativity as a regulatory tool.

Those well versed in mindfulness, somatic work or habit change may still welcome the way Beck links curiosity to nervous-system flexibility, giving an immediate lever to pull when worry spikes.

The message is ultimately hopeful. “Beyond Anxiety” does not promise a life without fear; instead it shows how to transform anxious energy into fuel for discovery, relationships and purpose.

Readers who want steps they can try today — without jargon or heavy time commitments — will find the approach inviting. As a field guide for overwhelmed beginners, it is clear, humane and designed for real life.

 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Costa Rica’s Rainforests’

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Updated 12 October 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Costa Rica’s Rainforests’

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  • This lavishly illustrated book provides a fascinating, up-to-date, and accessible introduction to the natural history of this forest and its flowering plants

Author: SCOTT WESLEY SHUMWAY

The lowland rainforest of Costa Rica is one of the most biologically diverse ecosystems on the planet.

This lavishly illustrated book provides a fascinating, up-to-date, and accessible introduction to the natural history of this forest and its flowering plants, ferns, fungi, birds, amphibians, reptiles, mammals, fishes, and insects.

The book focuses on La Selva Research Station, one of the best-studied tropical forests in the world, but it applies to all of Costa Rica’s lowland rainforests and the species it covers are common throughout much of Central America and the Neotropics.

 


What We Are Reading Today: The Life of Violet by Virginia Woolf

What We Are Reading Today: The Life of Violet by Virginia Woolf
Updated 11 October 2025

What We Are Reading Today: The Life of Violet by Virginia Woolf

What We Are Reading Today: The Life of Violet by Virginia Woolf

In 1907, eight years before she published her first novel, a 25-year-old Virginia Woolf drafted three interconnected comic stories chronicling the adventures of a giantess named Violet — a teasing tribute to Woolf’s friend Mary Violet Dickinson.

But it was only in 2022 that Woolf scholar Urmila Seshagiri discovered a final, revised typescript of the stories.

The typescript revealed that Woolf had finished this mock-biography, making it her first fully realized literary experiment and a work that anticipates her later masterpieces.