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The Book of Illusions

A Novel

By Paul Auster

(113)

| Paperback | 9780312421816

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Book Description

Vermont professor David Zimmer is a broken man. The protagonist of Paul Auster's 10th novel, The Book of Illusions, hits a period in which life seemed to be working aggressively against him. After his wife and sons are killed in an airplane crash, Zimmer becomes an alcoholic recluse, fond of Continue

Vermont professor David Zimmer is a broken man. The protagonist of Paul Auster's 10th novel, The Book of Illusions, hits a period in which life seemed to be working aggressively against him. After his wife and sons are killed in an airplane crash, Zimmer becomes an alcoholic recluse, fond of emptying his bottle of sleeping pills into his palm, contemplating his next move. But one night, while watching a television documentary, Zimmer's attention is caught by the silent-film comedian Hector Mann, who had disappeared without a trace in 1929 and who was considered long-dead. Soon, Zimmer begins work on a book about Mann's newly discovered films (copies of which had been sent, anonymously, to film archives around the world). The spirit of Hector Mann keeps David Zimmer alive for a year. When a letter arrives from someone claiming to be Hector Mann's wife, announcing that Mann had read Zimmer's book and would like to meet him, it is as if fate has tossed Zimmer from one hand to the other: from grief and loss to desire and confusion.

Although film images are technically "illusions," this deft and layered novel is not so much about conscious illusion or trickery as about the traces we leave behind us: words, images, memories. Children are one obvious trace, but in this book, they are not allowed to carry their parents forward. They die early: Hector Mann losing his 3-year-old son to a bee sting just as David Zimmer has lost his two sons in the crash. The second half of The Book of Illusions is given over to a love affair, and to Zimmer's attempt to save something of Hector Mann, and of the others he has loved. In the end, what really survives of us on earth--what flickering immortality we are permitted--is left to the reader to surmise. --Regina Marler

Critics

  • Dead men do tell tales

    The Book of Illusions by Paul Auster Faber and Faber £16.99, pp321 A professor whose entire family has died in a plane crash, leaving him so ravaged by grief that he becomes like a zombie stumbling through a living death; a silent movie star of the T ... (read full critics)

    guardian.co.uk published on Sat, 25 Sep 2010

  • Sleight of hand

    The Book of Illusions by Paul Auster 321pp, Faber, £16.99 The title of Paul Auster's new book makes it sound less like a novel than a compendium of magic tricks - which, in a way, is what a novel amounts to. The Book of Illusions bristles with switch ... (read full critics)

    guardian.co.uk published on Sat, 25 Sep 2010

5 Reviews

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  • Quite good from the very begining

    Check my blog out: http://lunairereadings.blogspot.com/2011/09/book-of-ill…

    10-10-2011: Found it a little bit more tragic that I could stand. This guy is somehow always surrounded by people who die or are about to die. I would have liked to read something less sad from this ve ... (continue)

    Check my blog out: http://lunairereadings.blogspot.com/2011/09/book-of-ill…

    10-10-2011: Found it a little bit more tragic that I could stand. This guy is somehow always surrounded by people who die or are about to die. I would have liked to read something less sad from this very entertaining author.

    09-18-2011: As always, this author has trapped me since the very first word. I'll see how this beautifol story evolves, but I know I'll not feel defrauded.

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    ariadna73 said on Sep 19, 2011 | Add your feedback

  • Redemption is an Illusion

    The book of Redemption has turned out to be (yet another) book of desolation

    After numerous attempt, I am on the fringe of declaring defeat and confess that it wasn't able for me to come up with a neat review about Paul Auster's The book of Illusion. The fashion in which the book was ended was sim ... (continue)

    The book of Redemption has turned out to be (yet another) book of desolation

    After numerous attempt, I am on the fringe of declaring defeat and confess that it wasn't able for me to come up with a neat review about Paul Auster's The book of Illusion. The fashion in which the book was ended was simply too much for me to bear. To be frank, I am surprised myself at the extent to which the book had grasped me. That was totally beyond expectation. I guess the characters of David Zimmer and Hector Mann were just too convincing and compelling. TO that end I guess Auster should be credited for such an accomplishment.

    Rereading the part about Hector Mann (Hermann Loesser by then) and Sylvia Meers' encounter, it suddenly dawn upon me that it was only for the way the whole story ends, given how macabre the whole book is.

    I have written heaps of fragmented points and paragraphs during my no less than four readings of the book (and of course these aren't out-to-out beginning to end readings, save the firs two times) but I have yet to organize those messy lines into a coherent, organized piece.

    Given the many, and I mean many, elements in the book that struck me, that was only one central thought about it that I could never put it out of my mind. That much was beyond a doubt. That the 'Illusion' pertains to in the title of the book was none other than the delusional sense of salvation. That Redemption is but an Illusion. Hence the title for this little piece.

    (It struck me that the piece of post reading comment (I hesitate to call it a review) should be as precise and concise as possible, and thus I literally truncated the large amount of longwinded afterthoughts and reduced them to a tenth in length. Perhaps I would include those fragments elsewhere.)

    better a short little piece of presentable

    Of course Redemption is an illusion. It takes only a fool to expect light awaits at the end of the tunnel for the likes of David Zimmer and Hector Mann

    With that I made peace with the book.

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    Paul Yeung said on Jul 16, 2010 | Add your feedback

  • This book was a bit of a curate's egg. I thought the first 80 or 90 pages, focussing on the main character, were brilliant. Then the book followed the life of the man he had written a biography of, and this part was less engaging, plus I personally didn't like a section which included graphic sexu ... (continue)

    This book was a bit of a curate's egg. I thought the first 80 or 90 pages, focussing on the main character, were brilliant. Then the book followed the life of the man he had written a biography of, and this part was less engaging, plus I personally didn't like a section which included graphic sexual details. Finally, the ending didn't ring true to me; it seemed somewhat contrived.

    Is this helpful?

    Andy Neads said on Mar 5, 2008 | Add your feedback

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