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Paul Auster : Oracle Night
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Author: Paul Auster
Title: Oracle Night
Moochable copies: No copies available
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Published in: English
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 224
Date: 2005-02-03
ISBN: 0571216978
Publisher: Faber & Faber
Weight: 0.31 pounds
Size: 0.55 x 4.96 x 7.8 inches
Edition: paperback / softback
Previous givers:
11
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Previous moochers:
11
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Wishlists:
2Tracey (United Kingdom), miss_bookworm (Italy).
Description: Product Description
1st trade edition paperback, fine In stock shipped from our UK warehouse


Amazon Review
Paul Auster's 11th novel Oracle Night is as intelligent and compellingly written as any he has produced. Sydney Orr is a writer recovering from an illness that almost killed him. Out on his daily constitutional he happens upon a curious stationery shop, the Paper Palace, and purchases a blue Portuguese notebook. The notebook casts a curious hold over Orr and seems to enable him to write, something he hasn't done since coming out of hospital. He writes a story about a books' editor who, on serendipitously avoiding some falling masonry, decides to read the near-accident as a reason to change his life. He takes an unread, recently discovered, manuscript of an important writer from the 1930s, Sylvia Maxwell, and disappears off to Kansas City. Reinvention and the associated idea that identity is fluid, re-imaginable, are linked, as is often the case with Auster, to the idea of chance.

So, Auster's usual themes are here: writing about writers and writing he discusses themes such as identity, disappearance, creativity, chance. But, despite what initially looks like a tricky structure (with footnotes and stories within stories) this is really a novel about love and forgiveness. Notwithstanding the dubious reputation of being a "writer's writer" the philosophical Auster has written a comparatively simple, very moving, quite brilliant novel. If the novel's ending is a little too neat, and the drama, as the narrative moves to a close, a little too soap opera, this hardly matters. --Mark Thwaite

Reviews: Tweedledum (United Kingdom) (2012/06/09):
Paul auster is a writer who seduces the reader into following his increasingly complex story webs but in oracle night at least then leaves the reader hooked and frustrated by openly refusing to finish a story he has teased you with. Clever stuff .



Tweedledum (United Kingdom) (2012/07/31):
Clever and complex network of stories.



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