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Somehow you'd think
with a title that this that there might be at least, like, one laugh
somewhere in the book. Well, you'd think wrong. And you'd also wonder
after reading this what the hell these follies have anything to do
with the narrative of the story. It would be like calling Star
Wars something like The Education of Luke. The follies
were just this weird side-project undertaken by one of the main characters
that, unless I'm missing something, is really out of left field. It's
a strange non-sequitur that seems more like an author trying to project
authorly characteristics onto all of his characters. The gist is that
our protagonist, Nathan Glass, retires to Brooklyn after his family
falls apart and decides--despite living life as an insurance salesman--to
create a piecemeal book (one which he has no intention of ever publishing,
showing to anyone or even reading himself) called "The Book of Human
Folly" out of scraps of paper he tosses in a hat. Why this sudden
urge to write? Why not? And then Nathan happens to run into his long
lost favorite nephew, who happens to be--ta-da!--a writer! And where
does he run into him? In a used book store, where he is working, of
course. This seems to me like Annie Leibovitz only taking photos of
other people that appear to be photographers. Anyway, we learn about
Nathan's estranged daughter and his drug-addicted, porn star niece
(who is now a "Christian") and her daughter, and then we
start asking ourselves where the hell the silliness is going to end.
And then we get embroiled in a ridiculously amateurish tale about
the used bookstore owner running a rare book forging scam with some
old colleagues. I'm not sure if this is supposed to be intriguing
or though-provoking or what, but it really just comes off as a third-rate,
half-assed mystery movie. I certainly can't say I hated the book,
but I was thoroughly underwhelmed, and even dismayed at times at how
truly flat the writing and storyline were. Perhaps it's his style
that I just can't get used to, but there's a certain disconnected
feel to his narration that allows your mind to wander to other things
(work, the world outside the train/bus, lunch) and not absorb the
text of the story, but not really miss anything on the surface either.
The book goes through its paces, and eventually ends up in a good
place, but, as the title suggests, Nathan's biggest folly is believing
that everything can end happily.
Other titles by Paul Auster:
The
Book of Illusions
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