A Tribute to Paul Auster

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  • čas přidán 24. 05. 2024
  • If you are fans of Auster's fiction, too - why do you like his books? Which one is your favorite? And what did you think of 4 3 2 1?
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Komentáře • 30

  • @JohnnyCashavetes
    @JohnnyCashavetes Před 2 měsíci +6

    The New York Trilogy was my awakening. While I view it now as a clear entry into postmodern fiction, I didn't know what postmodernism was when I read it, so it seemed like this beautiful anomaly that didn't exist within conventional genres. What you describe as the strangeness/ordinary balance within his work is what blew things wide open for me because I had previously viewed novels as having to make a choice between the two. The audacity to blend the two would being interesting in itself, but the mastery in which he did it is where he really shined. Preposterous metaphysical things made complete sense surrounded by the normalcy or even mundane found in his pure observational realism.
    The opening section of Book of Illusions where the suicidal protagonist laughs for the first time in 6 months watching a silent film is my favorite bit of writing in his entire oeuvre. The rest of the novel, unfortunately, doesn't remain at that level, but that bit alone is enough for me. Ever since then I've become fascinated with works of art, whatever the form, keeping people going. It's a beautiful topic that still feels underexplored to me.
    I've also been fascinated with his greater reputation in Europe. He always credited his simple prose as translating easier and truer than his contemporaries. Which really makes translation as a whole sort of melt my brain. As an English speaker (and reader), have I ever REALLY read Umberto Eco? I will never know the answer to this. And I think I bring this up every time you've discussed Auster on this channel over the years lol (I certainly did when you re-read The New York Trilogy).
    Auster was just a great writer. Will miss him being in the world. And don't even want to think about DeLillo leaving us too, but I am now!

  • @Mondoscritto
    @Mondoscritto Před 2 měsíci +7

    Goodbye Paul 🥲❤

  • @dandeluca
    @dandeluca Před 2 měsíci +7

    I was shocked to hear you mention my favorite book by Paul Auster, In the Country of Last Things. That was also the book that turned me on to Auster, and nobody here (NYC) seems to have heard of it. It's like Auster's version of The Road, except written at the beginning of his career rather than the end. And like you said, the strong, realistic characters make the fantastic elements of the story so much more relatable. I have a copy of 4-3-2-1 but I too have not gotten to it, it's been on my kindle for years but I'm always wary of starting thousand-page books. Maybe it's time!

    • @TheBookchemist
      @TheBookchemist  Před měsícem +1

      It's very true that you NEVER hear people talk about Country of Last Things, which is very surprising considering how popular dystopia was for a while in recent years (and still is?).
      It sounds, too, like there's lots of us who are determined to read 4 3 2 1 but haven't dived in quite yet :D

  • @thatsmeemstaht90
    @thatsmeemstaht90 Před 2 měsíci +8

    Thank you for this :)
    My favorite Auster novel ist „The invention of solitude“. I am unsure of how i would feel if i reread it. But when i read it after the New York Trilogy it changed me. The second part being more of a collection of associations and thoughts really spoke to me. I think my thoughts flow in a very similar way.
    Also it opened me to what art can be and do for me, which left me with a deeper appreciation for reading!

  • @Paromita_M
    @Paromita_M Před 2 měsíci +5

    RIP 🙏🏽🌷
    I liked 4321 and The New York Trilogy.
    Sad to lose him.

  • @lo3769
    @lo3769 Před 2 měsíci +6

    His first book I read was Moon Palace and I was hooked for life. I haven't loved everything I read from him, but those I love are in my all-time fave books list. I haven't read 4321 yet either. I am a french expatriate in the US and I can confirm that I haven't met a single American yet who's ever heard of him 😂 It's crazy. I did make a few friends read him, and overall they thought he was weird. Oh well... at least the EU understands him 😂

  • @AlexP22000
    @AlexP22000 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Thanks for making this video. I was also really saddened to hear of Paul Auster's death, and it's comforting to see someone else sharing his love for him, and being able to keep him alive in that way at least. You actually encapsulated an intuitive feeling I've had ever since I first read Auster but never knew how to put into words: that he's not really an all-the-way postmodernist, but has an important grounding in realism as well. I love him for this reason, as his ability to write interesting, believable characters and, for all the strangeness in his books, evoke 'real life' situations makes his books easier to get into and love for me. It follows from here that my favorite novel of his is probably Moon Palace, which is one of the best bildungsromans I've ever read. I'd definitely recommend it, as I would 4321. Although the latter was somewhat slow and hard to follow at times, I find that Auster just has a knack for writing about childhood and youth that I haven't really found in another author's work.

    • @TheBookchemist
      @TheBookchemist  Před měsícem

      I've noted Moon Palace - it wasn't on my radar before! Thanks so much for the comment!

  • @didierleclair2310
    @didierleclair2310 Před měsícem +2

    Brooklyn follies and Man in the dark. These are my favorites. Why? Because he's at his best when he doesn't go all the way into strange story. In my opinion, the 2 books I mention have a great mix of strangeness, philosophical content and realism.

  • @ishtarb3701
    @ishtarb3701 Před 2 měsíci +3

    I have the opening paragraph of City of Glass memorized by heart. And I believe it applies to interpretations of almost all his fiction. Especially the last line of the paragraph: "The question is the story itself and whether or not it means something is not for the story to tell."

  • @stuartmoore1064
    @stuartmoore1064 Před měsícem +1

    4321 is the only one I have read. Greatly enjoyed it and need to get to his others, especially the New York Trilogy.

  • @jwalk2287
    @jwalk2287 Před 19 dny

    Auster is one of the all-time greatest American authors. My favorites are The Red Notebook, 4 3 2 1, Man in the Dark, City of Glass, Book of Illusions, and Winter Journal. Much respect for your video 🙏
    4 3 2 1 is a great novel. The sentences are long and propulsive, and the characters are lovely. His narrative voice is in top form in this novel. I prefer it to New York Trilogy.

  • @reinholddawon7589
    @reinholddawon7589 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Auster is one of my favourite writers, because, like you said, he combines and roots his kind of arealism (I think surrealism doesn't apply to his novels, pararealism describes Murakami but not Auster ) with psychological realism - but also because I like his refined and cultivated style of writing. My favourite novel is Sunset Park, one of his best for me the kafkaesque Music of Chance. The Winter Journal became very important for my own personal writing. 4-3-2-1 I didn't read, I'd rather reread the New York Trilogy.

  • @danielg.w5733
    @danielg.w5733 Před 2 měsíci +2

    The only book of his i read was city of glass by way of the comic. I found his prose lovely and rhe way he explored language as a concept to extremely fascinating. Personally i wish he had worked as a vomic writer on the side like Jerome Charyn. I think that different mode if expression would have allowed to crwate some interesting work

  • @constancecampbell4610
    @constancecampbell4610 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I have only read the first section of 4321, but I remember enjoying it quite a lot. The young boy was extremely likable. When I started the second section, I did not immediately warm to it, though I can’t remember why. I will try again someday.

  • @joshc6569
    @joshc6569 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I haven't read any Paul Auster yet. I have him on my list, since he seems like the sort of writer that I would interest me.

  • @enriqueaguilar4997
    @enriqueaguilar4997 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I haven’t read 4 3 2 1 yet. My favorite book is Oracle night.

    • @TheBookchemist
      @TheBookchemist  Před měsícem

      I must confess that I have forgotten much of the plot of Oracle Night, but the character's passion for that particular brand of notebook has really stayed with me and is conveyed very beautifully in the early book!

  • @mrl9418
    @mrl9418 Před 2 měsíci

    Woo rieccoti!

    • @mrl9418
      @mrl9418 Před 2 měsíci

      Cioè, rieccoti fra i miei video suggeriti dell'algoritmo

    • @TheBookchemist
      @TheBookchemist  Před měsícem

      Ahah, grazie algoritmo ^^

  • @crowdofdissidents155
    @crowdofdissidents155 Před 2 měsíci

    What category did you study for your PhD? I study 20th century American lit. I know you already mentioned this somewhere. As I am trying to complete my manuscript, I haven't had time to view all of your videos, but it is still nice that they are here when I finally have time. Thanks

    • @TheBookchemist
      @TheBookchemist  Před měsícem +1

      I studied contemporary American literature :)

  • @Manfred-nj8vz
    @Manfred-nj8vz Před měsícem

    I'm currently reading 4 3 2 1, I'm still relative in the beginning (page 200 from total 1217 pages according to the Greek edition). I have to say that it is an easy and interesting read and that it is my first Auster book. But there is a thing about - how to call it? - "modern" literature?, "nowadays" literature?, that the writers don't use any dialogues; the whole book is just narration; every page in this long novel seems even longer, because every page is fully crowded with text. Sometimes I have the feeling that the text (and the reader as well) has no time to breath. Why does modern literature use no dialogue at all? Does that mean that some writers are not able to use the dialogue form? Is there an answer to that? I'm sorry if I insist, but have you ever read anything by Nikos Kazantzakis? In order to see what is a powerful but also vivacious/lively narration I heartily recommend his novel «La seconda crocifissione di Cristo». Have you ever thought to make a video about him?

    • @TheBookchemist
      @TheBookchemist  Před 22 dny

      I haven't read any Kazantzakis - although it sounds like I should :)!

    • @Manfred-nj8vz
      @Manfred-nj8vz Před 21 dnem

      @@TheBookchemist Yes, please! Crocetti Editore produce new Italian translations of his novels. However, I would suggest you, if I may, to read first his novel «Cristo di nuovo in croce e La seconda crocifissione di Cristo», which was translated back in 1954. Apart from his novels, I believe that it would be very interesting for you to have a look into Kazantzakis Opus Magnum, his epos "The Odyssey" (1938), a poem of 33.333 verses, which was translated into Italian by Nicola Crocetti in 2021. If you are interested there are many videos in which Crocetti talks about Kazantzakis. For example, there is this discussion on YT: «F.Gifuni legge da Odissea di Kazantzakis - Conversazione di A.Landolfi con P.Del Zoppo e N.Crocetti», where Crocetti talks from 26:27 onwards about Kazantzakis in general and his "Odyssey" in particular. It's a very nice general introduction about the man and his Oeuvre.
      Dear Bookchemist, I hope that you will enjoy and appreciate this author as much as I do. I am very well aware that your appetite in books concentrates mostly on contemporary (American) literature and I am enjoying your videos a lot. Since you are a literature scholar, I could also suggest you to read, if you are interested, some essays on Kazantzakis written by Roderick Beaton. For example: a) «Of Crete and Other Demons: A Reading of Kazantzakis's Freedom and Death» and b) «The temptation that never was: Kazantzakis and Borges». I firmly believe that Kazantzakis is something quite special and unique in all literature. I would love to see you comment and review any book by Kazantzakis and with that wish I send you my best regards from Greece!

  • @guharup
    @guharup Před 2 měsíci

    ohh didnt know. So sad

  • @nikchemnyk
    @nikchemnyk Před 2 měsíci +1

    I've only read New York trilogy (in a great translation of Yaroslava Strikha), which I obviously thought was quite accomplished and was a breeze to read. But I ultimately landed on a rather narrow interpretation of the book as being about a writer's process (the first novella is about finding a unique way to express yourself through language, the second one about creating characters, and the third about interplay between your artistic and your everyday selves, was my read IIRC), and that narrowness (disproportionally, I suppose, of my own making), as well as a feeling that the book lacked a certain joie de vivre to compensate for it, made my response to the book a little muted.
    Bought English-language edition of 4 3 2 1 a long time ago in some airport, and was excited by the reports of that book being uncharacteristically (or maybe not uncharacteristically, but surprisingly for me, who only knows Auster by New York trilogy) straight, non-mindfuck-y novel, but haven't got to it yet. God knows, there's so much shit fantasy to read in the meantime.