Winter Journal
Facing his sixty-forth winter, internationally acclaimed novelist Paul Auster decides to write a journal as he sees himself aging in ways he never imagined. Compellingly written, and with dreamlike logic and urgency, the autobiographical fragments and meditations produce an extraordinary mosaic...
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Facing his sixty-forth winter, internationally acclaimed novelist Paul Auster decides to write a journal as he sees himself aging in ways he never imagined. Compellingly written, and with dreamlike logic and urgency, the autobiographical fragments and meditations produce an extraordinary mosaic of a life. Weaving together vividly detailed stories, Auster illuminates how each small incident comes to signify a whole. Also, there are two recurring moments: one of bodily terror -- his panic attack following his mother's death in 2002; the other of joy -- his experience watching a dance piece in 1978 which releases him from writer's block just prior to his father's death. It was his father's death that began his first equally unconvential and internationally celebrated memoir, The Invention of Solitude, published thirty years ago. Now, Auster has included an unforgettable portrait of his mother. Winter Journal is a surprising and moving meditation on time, the body, the weight of memory, a long and fulfilling marriage (with author Siri Hustvedt), and language itself by one of the most interesting and elegant writers writing today, and one with a devoted following.
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Format: hardcover
ISBN:
9780771009044 (0771009046)
Publish date: August 7th 2012
Publisher: McClelland & Stewart
Pages no: 240
Edition language: English
Winter Journal is Paul Auster revealing himself. He swoops down into the darkest (and lightest) bits of him and PRESTO we have the inner workings of an excellent artistic writer. I decided to audio book this because Auster reads the book himself, giving you the perfect tone and inflection. The "jour...
As much as I loved this book I do feel in some way Auster was a bit of a coward in some of his most frank honesty. I explain why here:http://mewlhouse.hubpages.com/hub/Recording-Sounds-of-the-Growing-Old
This book was lovely, insightful, and bored me half to death. I guess I just wasn't in the mood for it, although I wish I had been.
Book of the WeekAbout to turn 64, Paul Auster looks back on life as a young man embarking for Paris.
MY THOUGHTSLOVED ITThe recounting of one's life is a difficult thing to attempt, so Paul Auster uses the second person YOU in almost every sentence, which at first thought, seems like a horrible idea. The writing is so fluid and remarkable that it won't bother you and you will wonder why no one els...