Paul Auster's Best Books: A Guide
Briefly

Auster's genre-defying books feature elusive narrators, chance encounters, and labyrinthine narratives, exploring fluid identity and the absurdity of the writer's life.
His debut memoir, The Invention of Solitude, focuses on themes of grief, loss, identity, loneliness, and coincidence, which became central in his later works, both fiction and nonfiction.
Read at www.nytimes.com
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