Some things he does do then. He assaults the reader's sense of whatever the reader thinks is taking place. In The Castle we remorselessly revisit situations and characters we may have thought we had a handle on only to find that everything might be, probably is, different from what we thought, but it doesn't much matter since next time round our perspectives will be shifted yet again. He drenches us in power, status and sexuality until these seem to be the only realities accounting for human behaviour, but since none of the behaviour makes any real sense these fixed points seem illusory. He makes us laugh, remorselessly, until the laughter begins to grate when the joke has gone on too long, and then he lets it go on even longer.
He doesn't let go, even when we put the book down and leave the castle walls. He shows us ourselves and it's not pretty.
Surely K. must be amongst the least likeable characters in literature?
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