On to Ghosts. The Theme of watching, identity and words arise again. Naming everyone after colours is a good touch.
It's not as good as City of Glass but very interesting.
Has anyone read Walden by Thoreau? Are there themes linking it to Ghosts?
On to Ghosts. The Theme of watching, identity and words arise again. Naming everyone after colours is a good touch.
It's not as good as City of Glass but very interesting.
Has anyone read Walden by Thoreau? Are there themes linking it to Ghosts?
I am going to do some research on this Thoreau question. I do at this point know that one of the other influences in Auster is Emersonian transcendentalism. So I'll start there.
Life is lived forward
and understood backward
We can perhaps safely presume that the things that the narrator tells us was all written down by Quinn in his red notebook. Initially, Quinn limited his entries to his impressions of the Stillmans and his detective work. But at some point, as he started losing control, there was a shift and he began writing about things more personal. So it is highly likely that he eventually got around to telling his own story right from the beginning. Where I am more doubtful is with regards Quinn's reliability. He was hurtling into a serious mental breakdown so who knows, his impressions and recordings could be more the product of his own deranged imagination (including the food that was mysteriously provided for him at the Stillman appartment) rather than factual.
"He lives most gaily who knows best how to deceive himself. Ha-ha!"
- CRIME AND PUNISHMENT (Fyodor Dostoyevsky)
Actually, the whole book feels like an exploration in American literature, or perhaps a literature degree. Some big names in there: Poe, Whitman, Thoreau, Hawthorne.
Virgil, I don't know what egg creams are - can you enlighten me?
Ooh, sorry I looked it up. Did you know the egg cream was invented by Louis Auster? Freaky![]()
Last edited by TheFifthElement; 01-11-2009 at 04:39 PM.
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Based on my research, the importance of Thoreau is that both Blue and Black are, like Thoreau during his Walden experiment, in a state of self-exile. Black chooses this, and then forces Blue to do the same by making him shadow Black's every move. Walden is an experiment in self-reliance outside of society. Both men are basically locked in a room, alone.
Apparently, Auster himself has said of the story that "Ghosts" is dominated by "the spirit of Thoreau... Walden Pond in the heart of the city."
And oh, I have not had an egg cream in probably forty-odd years! My Grandmother used to make them for me all the time. My grandparents always had a seltzer dispenser thing in the fridge. I think it had a black top.
How about Charlotte Russe? Another childhood memory.
Last edited by Paige19; 01-11-2009 at 05:53 PM.
Life is lived forward
and understood backward
Oh my God, that is no coincidence. Auster, the author, had to know that an Auster invented the egg cream.Originally Posted by TheFifthElement;656842[B
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egg_creamAn egg cream is a classic beverage consisting of chocolate syrup, milk, and seltzer (soda water), probably dating from the late 19th century, and is especially associated with Brooklyn, home of its alleged inventor, candy store owner Louis Auster.[1][2] [3]It contains neither eggs nor cream. Some enthusiasts insist that an egg cream must be made with Fox's U-Bet, a chocolate syrup manufactured by H. Fox & Company[citation needed].
The egg cream is almost exclusively a fountain drink; although there have been several attempts to bottle it, none has been wholly successful, as its fresh taste and characteristic head requires mixing of the ingredients just before drinking. The drink can be compared to a traditional ice cream soda, though it contains no ice cream.
This is a very New York thing.Actually I'm afraid it's disappearing. Or I haven't seen any around any longer. Could be me. I haven't had one in decades.
LET THERE BE LIGHT
"Love follows knowledge." – St. Catherine of Siena
My literature blog: http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/
Oh I had to laugh when he's on the subway and a deaf mute panhandles. I remember those guys on the subway all the time. It was a frequent occurence that a deaf mute would hand out the whole subway car some item and then coe around and ask for a donation or collect them back. I don't remember pens with flags like in the book. I remember something that was a handy item that had deaf sign language signals on it.
It just occurred to me that if this novel is set in the early 1980's, then that was when I did the most commuting in my life through New York. That was when I was a college student and commutted an hour up from Brooklyn to Harlem to school, not too far actually from Quinn's apartment.
I haven't seen NickAdams around lately. Nick, are those deaf mutes still panhandling on the subway?
LET THERE BE LIGHT
"Love follows knowledge." – St. Catherine of Siena
My literature blog: http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/
I will read this when I can get around to it. I am sooo busy writing and reading some other things right now to read this. Will comment later on it too.
Cat
Cat Brenners
Hi Alexei, for some reason I missed these comments earlier.
Yes! I like your thinking. Have you given any thought to the purpose of the second Peter Stillman snr? I wondered if that was a red herring or a point to elucidate the point you've made above.
I finished City of Glass this morning. I think there's a lot of 'telling' in the Auster chapter, particularly with reference to Don Quixote and the link between these two books. Specifically these passages:
Note that it was said in the beginning that Quinn read stacks of detective novels.'And yet he goes on to say,' Quinn added, 'that Cid Hamete Benegeli's is the only true version of Don Quixote's story. All the other versions are frauds, written by imposters. He makes a great point of insisting that everything in the book really happened.'
'Exactly. Because the book after all is an attack on the dangers of the make-believe. He couldn't very well offer a work of the imagination to do that could he? He had to claim that it was real.'
'Still, I've always suspected that Cervantes devoured those old romances. You can't hate something so violently unless a part of you also loves it. In some sense, Don Quixote was just a stand-in for himself.'
And this passage too:
And then you find in City of Glass that the 'narrator' goes to great pains to present this as a true account. Then I wonder, if the whole question Auster (the character) raises over the authorship of Don Quixote is, in truth, a question over the authorship of City of Glass. Is Daniel Quinn, Don Quixote? From what I have read of Don Quixote, that is not his real name, he adopts the name Quixote when his delusions prompt him to take on the role of knight errant. So Daniel Quinn is Don Quixote, who has read so many detective fiction novels that he deludes himself into thinking he can be the real thing. He adopts the name Paul Auster for the role, and goes out to have a series of bizarre, absurd adventures that suspend belief. A man who so wholly deludes himself that he gives up his entire life to become a fiction character in a novel?'That's the most interesting part of all. In my opinion, Don Quixote was conducting an experiment. He wanted to test the gullibility of his fellow men. Would it be possible to stand up before the world and with the utmost conviction spew out lies and nonsense? To say that windmills were knights, that a barber's basin was a helmet, that puppets were real people? Would it be possible to persuade others to agree with what he said, even though they did not believe him? In other words, to what extent would people tolerate blasphemies if they gave them amusement? The answer is obvious isn't it? To any extent. For the proof is that we still read the book. It remains highly amusing to us. Ans that's finally all anyone wants out of a book - to be amused.'
I also noticed that the original lead to the Paul Auster detective agency came from the retired policeman husband of the nurse, Mrs Saavedra. His name is Michael, the Spanish version of which would be Miguel. Who is the author of Don Quixote: Miguel De Cervantes Saavedra!
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Ack! I have library issues and have to break off reading TNYT to read As I Lay Dying before it's due back. Will pick up in a few days, hopefully. Currently part way through Ghosts - I wondered about the stories he mentions: the murdered child, the skiing man who discovers his own father, the engineer who constructed the Brooklyn Bridge. Is there a point to these stories?
Last edited by TheFifthElement; 01-12-2009 at 03:08 PM.
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City of Glass : the narrator
Surely the narrator himself realizes that Quinn's story is so strange that it could come across as implausible, far-fetched -- thus the need for him now and again to underline its veracity and reliability. I personally do not attach much importance to the identity of the narrator. What surprised me though was that he should turn up suddenly in the first person at the last page. I think it was clever of Paul Auster (the author) to have found roles for himself and his family in his own work and to use names to link the characters to one another, like Daniel Quinn - Daniel Auster, Peter Stillman Sr. - Jr. -Peter Quinn, Michael Saavedra - Miguel Cervantes, etc. It makes me think of those mirrors that reflect an image on and on, further and further - probably one explanation for the story's title.
"He lives most gaily who knows best how to deceive himself. Ha-ha!"
- CRIME AND PUNISHMENT (Fyodor Dostoyevsky)
Fanshawe has returned!
I want to avoid giving too much away, but this is a book I will be reading again. I will put the book aside for now and read Poe, Thoreau, Whitman, Melville, the others mentioned and finish Don Quijote.
The Locked Room:
Does anybody else see a connection between the work of Fanshawe and Joyce, in terms of stylistic progression?
I will post the photos once I upload them.
Spoiler!!!
This reminds me of Mulholland Drive, I know it was published before, but I think the approach needed to interpret it is similar. The similarity between the red notebook and blue box is interesting.
I think all three must be read for complete understanding.
I haven't come across a panhandling deaf mute in over a year, but other classes of panhandlers remain.![]()
Last edited by NickAdams; 01-14-2009 at 02:00 AM.
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"He lives most gaily who knows best how to deceive himself. Ha-ha!"
- CRIME AND PUNISHMENT (Fyodor Dostoyevsky)
I just finished City of Glass. I am surprised that I actually like the story because of its absurdity and strangeness.
Men are sociable creatures, even if some prefer solitude and being alone more than others. Perhaps we don't recognise the madness in ourselves, so having someone around who will point out whether our obsession has become craziness, could stop a person from going completely insane or schizophrenic.
All the discussions on names and how they are related are very interesting. Does Virginia in Virginia Stillman mean anything ?
I'm back in after the quickest reading of As I Lay Dying in living history! OK, probably not
I think the same can be said of Don Quixote, certainly from what I have read.
I agree, the name links seem very calculated.
I came out of my first reading of this book wanting to do exactly as you've mentioned! I'm still resolved to read Don Quixote all the way through ( I started but didn't finish!) and I have Walden to read and a Hawthorne collection as well.
I never understood Mulholland Drive! Please explain it to me Nick![]()
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