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Paul Auster

Part of the Contemporary American and Canadian writers series
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Paul Auster provides the first extended analysis of Auster's essays, poetry, fiction, films and collaborative projects.

It explores his key themes of identity; language and writing; metropolitan living and community; and storytelling and illusion.

By tracing how Auster's representations of New York and city life have matured from a position of urban nihilism to qualified optimism, the book shows how the variety of forms he works in influences the treatment of his central concerns.

The chapters are organised around gradually extending spaces to reflect the way in which Auster's work broadens its focus, beginning with the poet's room and finishing with the global metropolis of New York: his home city and often his muse.

The book uses Auster's published and unpublished literary essays to explain the shifts from the dense and introspective poems of the 70s, through the metropolitan fictions of the 80s and early 90s, to the relatively optimistic and critically acclaimed films, and his return to fiction in recentyears. -- .

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Product Details
Manchester University Press
0719073960 / 9780719073960
Hardback
813.54
01/12/2007
United Kingdom
224 pages
138 x 216 mm
Further/Higher Education Learn More