Old Town Hall Clock Stopped Card
12 021 01
From Max Brod’s biography of Kafka: “…on June 11, at four o’clock, Kafka was placed in the grave… When we got back to the house of mourning, in Franz’s home in the Old Town Square, we saw that the great clock on the Town Hall had stopped at four o’clock, and its hands were still pointed to that hour.”
Kafka's Prague Card
12 022 01
Kafka lived in an adjacent building to the Tyn Church
at 3 Celetná Street and looked through his window,
made by a previous pious tenant, into the church’s interior. In the cathedral scene in “The Trial,” Joseph K. says
that “the size of the cathedral struck him as bordering
on the limits of what human beings could bear.”
Kafka looked into these limits every day.
Kafka's Golem Card
12 023 01
- The motif was designed by the American illustrator Mark Podwal on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the death of Franz Kafka
- a folded card
- colour: natural white, envelope
- 105 x 148mm / 4,1" x 5,8"
- a package of 10 pieces is delivered in a gift box
The only explicit Jewish tales in Kafka’s writings both concern a golem – a brief story about a rabbi’s attempt to make a clay man in a washtub and the tale of a strange creature that lives in a synagogue in northern Bohemia sixty kilometers from Prague.
Once a month we will send you our newest products that have been beautifully created in our workshop to view at your pleasure.