Letters to Ottla explained

Letters to Ottla and the Family
Title Orig:Briefe an Ottla und die Familie
Translator:Richard and Clara Winston
Author:Franz Kafka
Country:United States
Language:German
Genre:Letters
Publisher:Schocken Books
Release Date:1974
English Release Date:1982
Media Type:Print, Hardcover
Pages:130 p.
Isbn:0-8052-3772-0
Dewey:833/.912 19
Congress:PT2621.A26 Z53913 1982
Oclc:7554590

Letters to Ottla and the Family (Briefe an Ottla und die Familie) is a book collecting Franz Kafka's letters to his sister Ottla (Ottilie Davidová, née Kafka), as well as some letters to his parents Julie and Hermann Kafka. These letters were written between 1909 and 1924; though Ottla was murdered in the Holocaust (gassed in Auschwitz on October 7, 1943), the letters were preserved by her husband and children. Originally published in German in 1974, the letters were translated into English by Richard and Clara Winston and published by Schocken Books in 1982. The English edition also includes photographs of Kafka and Ottla, as well as several images of postcards, letters, and drawings Kafka had sent his sister.

References

Kafka, Franz. Letters to Ottla and the Family. New York City: Schocken Books, 1982.