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From the 1920s through the 1950s, Bertolt Brecht wrote a number of
short, fictionalized comments on contemporary life, politics, and
thought. Through the dramatic events of the first half of the
twentieth century, Brecht's Mr. Keuner offered up aphorisms, stray
thoughts, and fragments of anecdote that punctured contemporary
self-regard about religion, politics, business, and more.
Deceptively light in tone, and bite-size in presentation, Mr.
Keuner's comments bring Brecht's lacerating wit to bear on a wide
range of the half-truths and public lies of his era. This graphic
novel adaptation sets a number of Brecht's Mr. Keuner pieces, newly
translated, alongside cartoons by German artist Ulf K., whose
spare, abstract style lends force to the underlying meanings of
Keuner's pronouncements.
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