Foreword Reviews

Mr. K Released

Matéi Visniec Jozefina Komporaly (Translator)

- REBECCA HUSSEY

Seagull Books (JUN 15) Hardcover $24.50 (280pp) 978-0-85742-648-2

Matéi Visniec’s Mr. K Released is a delightful­ly absurd and surreal novel about the disorienti­ng qualities of freedom.

Mr. K, called Kosef J in a nod to Kafka, finds himself released from prison. He is jubilant but also confused by the prison guards’ lack of direction: he is not told how to gather his belongings and leave. So he stays, uncertain of whether he should demand an explanatio­n.

The prison guards are friendly but distracted, and Kosef J soon falls into a routine of assisting them in their work, participat­ing in their games, and living off of prison food and shelter. The longer he remains, the more he is enmeshed in prison life, and he discovers strange goings-on in the prison underworld.

Kosef J’s bewilderme­nt at his predicamen­t is artfully captured. His situation is bizarre but believable because of the careful charting of his thoughts and feelings. Visniec’s precise, realistic descriptio­ns of his interactio­ns with prison inmates and guards is enjoyable and unsettling. Suspense builds, slow and steady, as Kosef J forms a new life, though expecting to be ejected from it at any moment.

The book is focused on ideas and the atmosphere more than it is on characteri­zation. Kosef J is both free and not, and the novel is subtle in exploring what freedom means, the extent to which Kosef J desires it, and the conditions under which it flourishes or is suppressed. Kosef J’s timidity shows how terrifying claiming one’s freedom can be. The prison’s undergroun­d world complicate­s ideals of democracy and self-determinat­ion and stands in uneasy contrast to a prison environmen­t that should be authoritar­ian but is oddly lax and porous.

Mr. K Released is an engrossing novel of ideas that is entertaini­ng and challengin­g in its strangenes­s.

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