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I've read a few books
by Auster, and honestly can't say whether or not I liked them. His
stories tend to leave you cold. His themes tend to be filled with
loneliness, loss and general obsessive misery. He has a very straightforward
narrative and writing style which is neither flowery or showy. In
some ways, his style is similar to Raymond Chandler, but not quite
as stark and creepy. That said, there are very few highs and lows
in his storyline--nothing that makes you want to get right back to
reading where you left off. There is Auster's normal sense of mystery
as our main character, David Zimmer, researches the life of a long-disappeared
silent movie comedian named Hector Mann. Actually, he researches Mann's
film, and not so much his life. This is after Zimmer's entire family
dies in a plane crash, and, as a professor, he is looking for (or
falls into) the distraction of writing a book on Mann's films. We
find out Mann disappeared back in the 1920's after making films for
only one year. After the publication of his book, Zimmer moves on
to another project and has all but forgotten about Mann, until one
day a mysterious letter shows up at his door asking if he'd like to
meet with Mann. Ah, mystery established. I'm not sure what kind of
magic I was expecting with this whole thing, but the interesting premise
of a mysterious man coming back from the dead is mostly ignored for
the more normal redemptive tragedy, post-modern thing. The story behind
Mann's disappearance, which we learn through the telling of Zimmer's
eventual love interest, is part typical film noir plot device and
part soap opera silliness--as is the demise of said love interest.
Coincidental and accidental deaths always seem like cop-outs to me.
Ooops, I didn't mean to alter the narrative and the course of another
character's life (and coincidently push the story forward) by slipping
on that wet floor and banging my head! I kept reading, expecting to
eventually get to the twist--the thing that, in fact, made this "book
of illusions." What I discovered was a somewhat interesting story
about a broken man who finds love and motivation, only to lose it
because somebody's balance wasn't so hot.
Other titles by Paul Auster:
The
Brooklyn Follies
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