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The New York Trilogy
 
 

The New York Trilogy (Hardcover)

by Paul Auster (Author) "IT was a wrong number that started it, the telephone ringing three times in the dead of night, and the voice on the other end..." (more)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (74 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 36.00
Price: CDN$ 22.68 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details
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Product Description

Product Description

Paul Auster's great trilogy of 19851986 broke ground in its mix of serious fictional techniques and detective and mystery genres. Since that time it has become one of the most successful series of novels of the last decades, now republished in a beautiful cloth edition.



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Combining dark humor, Hitchcock-like suspense, and film-noir prose, these three unique novels--united--form a powerful and thought-provoking puzzle. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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First Sentence
IT was a wrong number that started it, the telephone ringing three times in the dead of night, and the voice on the other end asking for someone he was not. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

74 Reviews
5 star:
 (50)
4 star:
 (14)
3 star:
 (6)
2 star:
 (4)
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (74 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Existential gumshoes, Jun 22 2009
By Nicole Cormier - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: New York Trilogy (Paperback)
A mind-bending journey through a tapestry of loosely-connected images, themes, and experiences. Detectives who are themselves lost, trying to solve their own cases and...failing? I've started carrying around a red notebook myself. Delicious intertexts are peppered throughout the novel, buried treasures waiting for the reader to unlock them, perhaps encouraging some detective work of our own? Paul Auster is a brilliant madman.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome, Dec 25 2008
By NorthVan Dave (North Vancouver, British Columbia Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: New York Trilogy (Paperback)
I liked this novel. And I would recommend it to my friends. Which is the real test to determine if a novel is any good - at least in my opinion.

So what did I enjoy about this book? Hard to say. The stories were dark and not overly cheery. The characters were real and gritty and flawed. The setting for the stories was New York, and the descriptions Auster gave to the surroundings were credible. and believable.

My only criticism of the book is that I failed to see how the three stories tied together. So when I had finished the novel, I had this disjointed feeling. But that could be me and my inability to understand the underlying context of each of the three stories.

But that is my issue, and not an issue with the book itself. In short, I highly recommend this book.
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5.0 out of 5 stars ONE OF A KIND!, May 12 2005
By Scott Chiddister (Elmhurst, IL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: New York Trilogy (Paperback)
The novels that make up Paul Auster's New York Trilogy are notable for their brevity, inclusion of relatively extraneous material, and chronicling the main character's disintegration. In each of the three, the detector (a mystery writer enrolled as a detective, a detective watching a writer, and a writer trying to find his childhood friend who has made him his literary executor) becomes obsessed, his previous life cracking up.

In the last (The Locked Room) he recovers. In the middle one (Ghosts) he perhaps kills his quarry. In the first (City of Glass) he is cared for after his dissolution (suggesting that in all three, the detector is engaged by his quarry, though in the first one it remains unclear whether the wife is an agent for her father-in-law who is tailed by Quinn).

Auster's detective's remorseless quest for answers destroys their lives: All the questioning makes them implode.

Auster's detectives (and, surely, Auster himself) are very concerned with inscription: the notebook of the first, both the reports of surveillance and what Black is writing in the second, the texts Fanshawe left behind and the biography of him that never gets written in the third. Auster seems to be a postmodernist who believes in the lives of authors -- unraveling Don Quixote, recalling incidents in the life of Walt Whitman, disquisitions on Hawthorne and an unliterary reader's reading of Walden; the characters of The Locked Room have names from Hawthorne and enact a variant of the Hawthorne story related in Ghosts. (He also manages to tell the story of "Out of the past" and work in a Brooklyn Dodger game from Jackie Robinson's first season and to use many names of former New York Mets players for his characters.)

Is it metafiction? (Metamystery?) Or a very literature-obsessed writer playing with the mystery genre? Probably some of both. Epistemological mysteries. The most explicit statement of ultimate unknowability is: "We exist for ourselves, perhaps, and at times, even have a glimmer of who we are, but in the end we can never be sure, and as our lives go on, we become more and more opaque to ourselves, more and more aware of our incoherence." (p. 368).

Ghosts irritated me and I almost didn't read the last and best of the three novels as a result. Its aftertaste is better than its taste while chewing (reading) it. The Locked Room seems less coolly stylized, with less abstract characters.

Fanshawe has many experiences from Auster's life (as revealed in his recent account of making money to write). The super boy idealized by all, he is eventually indicted for lacking heart. Inhuman is not how even the coolest Auster prose strikes me. I don't think that he lacks compassion, but I have to think that he is concerned about lacking feeling. Not just in cannibalizing life in writing but in being incapable of love. Admittedly, this is reading a lot into the book. A fear of cracking up from observing too closely would be a more obvious moral of all three.

Anyway, as you can see I became totally absorbed in this book. Buy a copy of New York Trilogy -- you'll be happy. Another book I need to recommend -- completely unrelated to Auster, but very much on my mind since I purchased a "used" copy off Amazon is "The Losers' Club: Complete Restored Edition," a funny, highly entertaining little novel I can't stop thinking about.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Inner journey into obsession
This book is composed of three short stories that are not interrelated story wise. All three are investigation stories, where the main character's inquiry turns into obsessive... Read more
Published 3 months ago by S. Lavigne

3.0 out of 5 stars not a real detective story BY BROWNY
We were suposed to read "City of Glass" out of Auster's NEW YORK TRILOGY in our English advanced class. Read more
Published on May 3 2004 by Brenner Robert

4.0 out of 5 stars review of "City of Glass"
I like to give you a little impression of my opinion about Paul Auster's book "City of Glass". We were supposed to read it in the 13. Read more
Published on May 3 2004 by Brenner Robert

3.0 out of 5 stars Review of Paul Asters " city of glass"
Hi I'm a german highschool studend. In class we were supposed to read "the city of glass". Today we all write a review on it. Read more
Published on May 3 2004 by Brenner Robert

4.0 out of 5 stars Paul Auster's "City of Glass" - A review
In my advanced english course at school we were supposed to read Paul Auster's "City of Glass" the first of Paul Auster's detective stories from his book "The New York Triology"... Read more
Published on May 3 2004 by Brenner Robert

2.0 out of 5 stars Trying to be Clever
We read City of Glass for our book club and 8 out of 9 of us could not bear to read the last two stories of the Trilogy. Read more
Published on April 17 2004

2.0 out of 5 stars Not my style
When you read a book and whatever you are reading doesn't say anything is a waist of time, half of this book is written that way, maybe the stories are good, but when you read and... Read more
Published on Mar 3 2004 by Jorge Frid

4.0 out of 5 stars Two out of three ain't bad
Paul Auster's 'New York Trilogy' is widely hailed as a great piece of modern fiction.

I agree. As a whole, it's fantastic. Read more

Published on Oct 11 2003 by T. Lamoureaux

3.0 out of 5 stars Too Complicated and Sophisticated
The book tries to be too smart while it isn't. It wants to become a sophisticated literature game but it fails. Read more
Published on Oct 5 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars A must-have book!
I purchased this book through Amazon.com right after another great purchase, THE LOSERS' CLUB by Richard Perez, about an unlucky writer addicted to the personals. Read more
Published on Aug 21 2003

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