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Paul Auster - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Paul Auster, Auster, Smoke, Mr Vertigo, Timbuktu, New York Trilogy, Book of Illusions ... web site hit counter...
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Paul Auster is a writer, who like Beckett is obsessed with identity and the way it is constructed out of and through the medium of stories, words, or even the thinnest of airs. ... Paul Auster, now in his late fifties, first gained international renown with three stories published collectively as The New York Trilogy (1987).
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In "Timbuktu," Paul Auster's new novel, the setting moves from Brooklyn, where I used to live, to northern Virginia, where I used to live. This is a coincidence, and coincidence is no coincidence in an Auster novel.
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The New York Trilogy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The New York Trilogy is a series of novels by Paul Auster. Originally published sequentially as City of Glass (1985), Ghosts (1986) and The Locked Room (1986), it has since been collected int...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_New_York_Trilogy |
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Stillman's Maze is a site devoted to the study of Paul Auster, a contemporary American writer who has also authored screenplays and directed movies. ... It is called The Invention of Solitude. It is about my father, Peter Stillman. My name is Paul Auster.
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Auster's career has ranged from family memoir (The Invention of Solitude) to speculative dystopia (In The Country of Last Things), ... Background; · Paul Auster: the definitive website (unofficial); · Salon interview; · 'I realised I would've done better as a short-order cook...' interview transcript...
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Why turn one novel into another, asks Josh Lacey. Then again, given Paul Auster, Paul Karasik and David Mazzucchelli's City of Glass, why not? ... City of Glass by Paul Auster, Paul Karasik and David Mazzucchelli ; 144pp, Faber, £8.99...
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BOOKS review of the novels of Paul Auster. Paul Auster’s latest book, “Invisible” (Holt; $25), though it has charm and vitality in places, conforms to the Auster model. It is 1967. Adam Walker, a young poet studying literature at Columbia, mourns the loss of his brother, Andy, who drowned ... This being an Auster novel,
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