Paul Auster published his first prose work, the autobiographical The Invention of Solitude , in 1982; since then his fiction has gained ever growing popular and critical acclaim. This book is a stimulating pioneering study of eight works that make up the Auster The Invention of Solitude , the three novellas that comprise The New York Trilogy , and the novels In the Country of Last Things, Moon Palace, The Music of Chance , and Leviathan . Focusing on the quest – which she sees as the master narrative of all of Auster’s novels – Shiloh examines Auster’s writing in a multi-layered context of literary and philosophical paradigms relevant to his practice, such as the American tradition of the «open road,» the generic conventions of detective fiction, postmodernist concepts of the subject, Sartre’s and Camus’s existentialist theories, and Freud’s and Lacan’s psychoanalytic models, all of which offer enriching and insightful perspectives on Auster’s poetics.
Ilana Shiloh Livres


The double, the labyrinth and the locked room
- 186pages
- 7 heures de lecture
The present book explores detective and crime-mystery fiction and film from the perspective of their entrenched metaphors of paradox. --Book Jacket.