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Encyclopedia > New York Trilogy

The New York Trilogy is a series of novels or long stories by Paul Auster.

The first story, City of Glass (1985), features a writer turned private detective descending into madness. It explores layers of identity and reality: Paul Auster the writer of the novel; "the author" who reports the events as reality; "Paul Auster the writer", a character in the story; "Paul Auster the detective", who may or may not exist in the novel; Daniel Quinn, a writer of detective novels who undertakes a case himself; William Wilson, his nom de plume; and Max Work, the hero of Quinn's novels. William Wilson is also the title of an Edgar Allan Poe story about doppelgängers, while Quinn shares his initials with Don Quijote.


City of Glass was adapted in 1994 into a critically acclaimed experimental graphic novel by Paul Karasik and David Mazzucchelli, titled Paul Auster's City of Glass.


The second story, Ghosts (1986), is about a private eye called Blue who is investigating a man named Black for a client named White. Black and White turn out to be the same person, a writer who is writing a story about Blue watching him.


The Locked Room (1986) is the story of a writer who lacks the creativity to produce fiction. His childhood friend has produced creative work, and when he disappears the writer publishes his work and replaces him in his family. While trying to deal with their relationship, he discovers his creative gift, and it emerges that he is the author of the three stories of the trilogy.


External links

Links to discussion of the work (http://www.paulauster.co.uk/thenewyorktrilogy.htm)


  Results from FactBites:
 
The New York Trilogy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (544 words)
The New York Trilogy is a series of novels or long stories by Paul Auster.
Ostensibly presented as detective fiction, the stories of The New York Trilogy have been described as "metaanti-detective-fiction"; "mysteries about mysteries"; a "strangely humorous working of the detective novel"; "very soft-boiled"; a "metamystery"; "glassy little jigsaws"; a "mixture between the detective story and the nouveau roman".
The New York Trilogy is a particular form of postmodern detective fiction which still uses well-known elements of the detective novel (e.g.
Paul Auster (The Definitive Website) (959 words)
The New York Times in turn labelled Auster "a talent to watch...a writer who could tickle the brains of highbrow literary critics and spin a good yarn too".
Then came the Trilogy, and the rest, as we know, is history, as Auster has since proven himself a prolific writer churning out classic after classic, even dabbling in film (he wrote the screenplay for Smoke, Blue In The Face, and directed Lulu On The Bridge).
Though the Trilogy remains, in the eyes of many Auster fans, his most accomplished work, his subsequent novels are by no means less compelling or confusing.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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