Inventing Solitude

One day there is life... and then, suddenly, it happens there is death.
[FROM THE START OF THE FIRST PAGE]
The Invention of Solitude is the debut work of Paul Auster, a memoir published in 1982. The book is divided into two parts, Portrait of an Invisible Man, which concerns the sudden death of Auster's father, and The Book of Memory, in which Auster delivers his personal opinions concerning subjects such as coincidence, fate, and solitude, subjects that have become trademarks of Auster's works.

Portrait of an Invisible Man
The first part of the book is about Auster's father, a man barely present to his son, is the subject of this memoir/meditation. "Invisible to others, and most likely invisible to himself as well". Auster reconstructs his father's life from artifacts left behind after his sudden but quiet death.

The Book of Memory
The second part of the book comes across as more of a critical essay concerning many of the themes found in Auster's works: the order of events, absurdism, chance. Although The Book of Memory is slightly less autobiographical than Portrait of an Invisible Man, it is also a personal account of opinions and contains references to his life.
Memory as a place, as a building, as a sequence of columns, cornices, porticoes. The body inside the mind, as if we were moving around in there, going from one place to the next, and the sound of our footsteps as we walk, moving from one place to the next.
[THE INVENTION OF SOLITUDE, PAGE 82]
The Invention of Solitude, by Paul Auster
FABER & FABER • HARDBACK & PAPERBACK • 192 PAGES • PUBLICATION DATE 1982

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