Best-selling author Paul Auster, whose novels addressed existential questions of identity, language, and literature and created mysteries that raised more questions than they answered, has died. He was 77.
His death was confirmed by friend Jacki Lyden on behalf of Auster's family.
A leading figure in his generation of postmodern American writers, Auster wrote more than 20 novels, including The New York Trilogy, which included his 1985 breakthrough book, City of Glass, and his ambitious 2017 novel 4 3 2 1, which ran close to 1,000 pages.
"I think he was a really exciting and compelling voice of his generation," says Alys Moody, a professor who teaches postwar American literature. "Auster will be remembered for being one of the leading figures in a post-modern tradition that's reimagining how central language is, and how central writing is, and how central above all storytelling is."
Auster was born in 1947 in Newark, N.J., to Jewish middle-class parents of Austrian descent. After he graduated from Columbia University with undergraduate and Master's degrees, he moved to Paris. There, he supported himself by translating French literature. Auster returned to the United States in 1974, part of a disillusioned generation. In a private 1992 interview with me, he said his novel Leviathan was about a character much like himself: "Someone filled with a kind of idealistic hope about what could be done about the future of the country and the world, who saw all these dreams bit by bit be dismantled by subsequent political events."
In his 20s, Auster published his own essays, poems, and translations. A strange event in 1980 led to his first novel.
"I was living alone in Brooklyn. And I did receive a telephone call," he recalled. "And the person on the other end asked if he had reached the Pinkerton Agency. And, of course, I said no and hung up. But after the second or third time, I said, well, what if I said Yes? And that was the genesis of the novel."
The story of that novel, City of Glass, is set in motion when the main character, a detective fiction writer named Quinn, gets a late night phone call:
"I would like to speak to Mr. Paul Auster."
"There's no one here by that name."
"Paul Auster. Of the Auster Detective Agency."
"I'm sorry," said Quinn. "You must have the wrong number."
"This is a matter of utmost urgency," said the voice.
"There's nothing I can do for you," said Quinn. "There is no Paul Auster here."
"You don't understand," said the voice. "Time is running out."
The writer in the novel takes on the identity of the detective, who sets out to solve the mystery of "what is reality?" He was sometimes criticized for the bizarre coincidences in his work, but the events of his life, he said, outstripped the implausibility in his fiction.
"When I was about 13 or 14 years old and, I was off at a summer camp, and we got caught in a storm. And a boy standing next to me was killed by a bolt of lightning. Dropped dead. Struck down by the sky. I think maybe that informs my work more than any book I have ever read," he explained.
Auster also wrote and co-directed a handful of independent films. He was never at a loss for words. In 2017, he published an 880-page novel called 4 3 2 1 that told the story of one main character in four different versions, in alternating chapters. When he finished that book, he decided to take a break from fiction, so he began writing a 780-page biography of 19th century author Stephen Crane.
"I have tried in my books to turn myself inside out as much as possible," he said. "And not to hide behind style, tricks — whatever you might call it."
Auster, whose literary influences included Franz Kafka and Samuel Beckett, will be remembered for the purity of his language, and the seriousness of his intent.
Transcript
A MARTÍNEZ, HOST:
Bestselling author Paul Auster has died. He wrote more than 20 novels and was a leading figure in his literary generation. He was 77 years old. From New York, Tom Vitale reports that Auster was known for writing mysteries that raised more questions than they answered.
TOM VITALE, BYLINE: Paul Auster told me in 1989 that he was influenced by Kafka and Beckett, but the biggest impact on his writing was not literary.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED NPR BROADCAST)
PAUL AUSTER: When I was about 13 or 14 years old, and I was off at a summer camp, and we got caught in a storm. And a boy standing next to me was killed by a bolt of lightning - just dropped dead, struck down by the sky. I think maybe that informs my work more than any book I've ever read.
VITALE: The menacing sense that anything can happen runs through Auster's fiction. He came to prominence in 1985 with his first novel, "City Of Glass." He said the genesis of the story was a bizarre, late-night phone call when he was living alone in Brooklyn.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED NPR BROADCAST)
AUSTER: And the person on the other end asked if he had reached the Pinkerton Agency. Of course, I said no and hung up. But after the second or third time, I said, well, what if I had said yes?
VITALE: In the novel, the action is set in motion when the main character, a detective fiction writer named Quinn, gets a similar call.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED NPR BROADCAST)
AUSTER: (Reading) I would like to speak to Mr. Paul Auster. There's no one here by that name. Paul Auster of the Auster Detective Agency? I'm sorry, said Quinn. You must have the wrong number. This is a matter of utmost urgency, said the voice. There's nothing I can do for you, said Quinn. There's no Paul Auster here. You don't understand, said the voice, time is running out.
VITALE: Professor Alys Moody teaches postwar American literature.
ALYS MOODY: Paul Auster will be remembered for being one of the leading figures in a postmodern tradition that's reimagining how central language is.
VITALE: Language is central to a handful of independent films Paul Auster wrote and co-directed. The most successful was called "Smoke" in 1995, about a Brooklyn cigar store owner who changes the lives of his customers through the stories they tell each other. Each morning, the owner, played by Harvey Keitel, takes the same photo of his shop from the same view.
(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, "SMOKE")
HARVEY KEITEL: (As Auggie Wren) They're all same, but each one is different from every other one. You got your bright mornings and your dark mornings. You've got your summer light and your autumn light. The Earth revolves around the sun, and every day, the light from the sun hits the Earth at a different angle.
VITALE: Paul Auster was never at a loss for words. One of his last big books was an 880-page novel that tells the story of one main character in four different versions. When he finished that book, he said he needed to take a break from fiction. So he began a 780-page biography of 19th-century author Stephen Crane. But Auster was haunted by the idea that words were never enough.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED NPR BROADCAST)
AUSTER: I have tried in my books to turn myself inside out as much as possible and not to hide behind style, tricks - whatever you might call it.
VITALE: Paul Auster said what he admired in literature was a purity of language and a seriousness of intent.
For NPR News, I'm Tom Vitale in New York.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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