In the early 1930s, Germany and Japan are the celluloid axis who long to turn the art of cinema into propaganda. But this is a book where all failure comes to its foreordained conclusion. It is a netherworld where sleep, death, and cinema intersect. What people want they just can’t have, nothing is what it seems, and nothing predicted goes the way it ought to—a surprising and peculiar story that reveals itself through dexterous reading. Christian Kracht’s
The Dead
is an expectations bending book with more tricks than a circus.
Photos by Christopher Ho.
Christian Kracht: The Dead
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