Estrin said that the concept, an outline and the opening episodes of
Insect Dreams arrived in Vermont one morning at 3 AM, three weeks after he visited Kafka's grave.
Insect Dreams appeared from
BlueHen/Putnam in 2002. Since then it has been re-released (by
Unbridled Books). The book has the insect/man from
Franz Kafka's
The Metamorphosis meet several historical literary figures.
The New York Times mentioned the character's generosity and "heroic persistence." The
San Francisco Chronicle placed it in one of their top 100 books for the year in 2002. The book has been the subject of analysis regarding Estrin's use of proverbial material.
Insect Dreams was not the first Estrin book to be published. In 1971,
Dell Publishing released
reCreation: Some Notes on What’s What and What You Might Be Able To Do About What’s What, a
Whole Earth Catalog-like book which
fat acceptance movement has considered helpful. In 2004,
Chelsea Green released an analysis by Estrin of the work of
Peter Schumann through his cultural activist theater. Of
The Lamentations of Julius Marantz (Unbridled Books, 2007), the reviewer for the
San Francisco Chronicle said the story had heart, but turned into a "bit of a nonnarrative mess" at the end, and
The New York Times said it was full of anachronistic mistakes, and the protagonist dull, the book full of Estrin's own enthusiasms. ==Death==