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Literary sorcerer focused on the instability of life

Our writer pays tribute to Paul Auster who died this week

May 8, 2024 20:03
Paul Auster _Getty
Playful: Paul Auster
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Paul Auster, who died on April 30, was one of the outstanding Jewish-American writers of his generation. He wrote 20 novels, from his breakthrough works, The New York Trilogy in the mid-1980s, and The Brooklyn Follies (2005) to Sunset Park (2010) and Winter Journal (2012).

Auster was born in Newark, New Jersey in 1947 to Jewish middle-class parents. He was part of that Jewish literary generation that came of age in the 1980s, which included David Mamet, Tony Kushner and Nora Ephron.

Auster divided readers and critics. The Washington Post’s Michael Dirda praised his “limpid, confessional style” and his ability to “set disoriented heroes in a seemingly familiar world gradually suffused with mounting uneasiness, vague menace and possible hallucination”. James Wood, however, criticised Auster’s writing for its “clichés, borrowed language ... intricately bound up with modern and postmodern literature”.

Take his novel Travels in the Scriptorium (2006). The central character, Mr. Blank, finds himself alone in a room, unable to remember anything. The books tells the story of his encounters with a number of other characters, all named after characters from previous Auster novels. Blank’s relationship to the world is dominated by texts, labels and words.

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