Sunset Park: A Novel
Sunset Park: A Novel book cover

Sunset Park: A Novel

Hardcover – January 1, 2010

Price
$27.47
Publisher
Henry Holt
Publication Date
Dimensions
5.85 x 1.07 x 8.48 inches
Weight
1.05 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly Auster (Invisible) is in excellent form for this foray into the tarnished, conflicted soul of Brooklyn. New York native Miles Heller now cleans out foreclosed south Florida homes, but after falling in love with an underage girl and stirring the wrath of her older sister, he flees to Brooklyn and shacks up with a group of artists squatting in the borough's Sunset Park neighborhood. As Miles arrives at the squat, the narrative broadens to take in the lives of Miles's roommates--among them Bing, "the champion of discontent," and Alice, a starving writer--and the unlikely paths that lead them to their squat. Then there's the matter of Miles's estranged father, Morris, who, in trying to save both his marriage and the independent publishing outfit he runs, may find the opportunity to patch things up with Miles. The fractured narrative takes in an impressive swath of life and history--Vietnam, baseball trivia, the WWII coming-home film The Best Years of Our Lives--and even if a couple of the perspectives feel weak, Auster's newest is a gratifying departure from the postmodern trickery he's known for, one full of crisp turns of phrase and keen insights. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an alternate hardcover edition. Paul Auster is the bestselling, award-winning author of 16 novels, including Sunset Park, Invisible, Man in the Dark, Travels in the Scriptorium, The Brooklyn Follies , and Oracle Night . His work has been translated into more than 40 languages. He lives in Brooklyn, New York. --This text refers to an alternate hardcover edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1 For almost a year now, he has been taking photographs of abandoned things. There are at least two jobs every day, sometimes as many as six or seven, and each time he and his cohorts enter another house, they are confronted by the things, the innumerable cast-off things left behind byxa0the departed families. The absent people have all fled in haste, in shame, in confusion, and it is certain that wherever they are living now (if they have found a place to live and are not camped out in the streets) their new dwellings are smaller than the houses they have lost. Each house is a story of failure—of bankruptcy and default, of debt and foreclosure—and he has taken it upon himself to document the last, lingering traces of those scattered lives in order to prove that the vanished families were once here, that the ghosts of people he will never see and never know are still present in the discarded things strewn about their empty houses. The work is called trashing out, and he belongs to a four-man crew employed by the Dunbar Realty Corporation, which subcontracts its "home preservation" services to the local banks that now own the properties in question. The sprawling flatlands of south Florida are filled with these orphaned structures, and because it is in the interest of the banks to resell them as quickly as possible, the vacated houses must be cleaned, repaired, and made ready to be shown to prospective buyers. In a collapsing world of economic ruin and relentless, ever-expanding hardship, trashing out is one of the few thriving businesses in the area. No doubt he is lucky to have found this job. He doesn't know how much longer he can bear it, but the pay is decent, and in a land of fewer and fewer jobs, it is nothing if not a good job. In the beginning, he was stunned by the disarray and the filth, the neglect. Rare is the house he enters that has been left in pristine condition by its former owners. More often there will have been an eruption of violence and anger, a parting rampage of capricious vandalism—from the open taps of sinks and bathtubs overflowing with water to sledge-hammered, smashed-in walls or walls covered with obscene graffiti or walls pocked with bullet holes, not to mention the ripped-out copper pipes, the bleach-stained carpets, the piles of shit deposited on the living room floor. Those are extreme examples, perhaps, impulsive acts triggered by the rage of the dispossessed, disgusting but understandable statements of despair, but even if he is not always gripped by revulsion when he enters a house, he never opens a door without a feeling of dread. Inevitably, the first thing to contend with is the smell, the onslaught of sour air rushing into his nostrils, the ubiquitous, commingled aromas of mildew, rancid milk, cat litter, crud-caked toilet bowls, and food rotting on the kitchen counter. Not even fresh air pouring in through open windows can wipe out the smells; not even the tidiest, most circumspect removal can erase the stench of defeat. Then, always, there are the objects, the forgotten possessions, the abandoned things . By now, his photographs number in the thousands, and among his burgeoning archive can be found pictures of books, shoes, and oil paintings, pianos and toasters, dolls, tea sets, and dirty socks, televisions and board games, party dresses and tennis racquets, sofas, silk lingerie, caulking guns, thumbtacks, plastic action figures, tubes of lipstick, rifles, discolored mattresses, knives and forks, poker chips, a stamp collection, and a dead canary lying at the bottom of its cage. He has no idea why he feels compelled to take these pictures. He understands that it is an empty pursuit, of no possible benefit to anyone, and yet each time he walks into a house, he senses that the things are calling out to him, speaking to him in the voices of the people who are no longer there, asking him to be looked at one last time before they are carted away. The other members of the crew make fun of him for this obsessive picture taking, but he pays them noxa0heed. They are of little account in his opinion, and he despises them all. Brain-dead Victor, the crew boss; stuttering, chatterbox Paco; and fat, wheezing Freddy—the three musketeers of doom. The law says that all salvageable objects above a certain value must be handed over to the bank, which is obliged to return them to their owners, but his co-workers grab whatever they please and never give it a second thought. They consider him a fool for turning his back on these spoils—the bottles of whiskey, the radios, the CD players, the archery equipment, the dirty magazines—but all he wants are his pictures—not things, but the pictures of things. For some time now, he has made it his business to say as little as possible when he is on the job. Paco and Freddy have taken to calling him El Mudo. He is twenty-eight years old, and to the best of his knowledge he has no ambitions. No burning ambitions, in any case, no clear idea of what building a plausible future might entail for him. He knows that he will not stay in Florida much longer, that the moment is coming when he will feel the need to move on again, but until that need ripens into a necessity to act, he is content to remain in the present and not look ahead. If he has accomplished anything in the seven and a half years since he quit college and struck out on his own, it is this ability to live in the present, to confine himself to the here and now, and although it might not be the most laudable accomplishment one can think of, it has required considerable discipline and self-control for him to achieve it. To have no plans, which is to say, to have no longings or hopes, to be satisfied with your lot, to accept what the world doles out to you from one sunrise to the next—in order to live like that you must want very little, as little as humanly possible. Bit by bit, he has pared down his desires to what is now approaching a bare minimum. He has cut out smoking and drinking, he no longer eats in restaurants, he does not own a television, a radio, or a computer. He would like to trade in his car for a bicycle, but he can't get rid of the car, since the distances he must travel for work are too great. The same applies to the cell phone he carries around in his pocket, which he would dearly love to toss in the garbage, but he needs it for work as well and therefore can't do without it. The digital camera was an indulgence, perhaps, but given the drear and slog of the endless trash-out rut, he feels it is saving his life. His rent is low, since he lives in a small apartment in a poor neighborhood, and beyond spending money on bedrock necessities, the only luxury he allows himself is buying books, paperback books, mostly novels, American novels, British novels, foreign novels in translation, but in the end books are not luxuries so much as necessities, and reading is an addiction he has no wish to be cured of. If not for the girl, he would probably leave before the month was out. He has saved up enough money to go anywhere he wants, and there is no question that he has had his fill of the Florida sun—which, after much study, he nowxa0believes does the soul more harm than good. It is a Machiavellian sun in his opinion, a hypocritical sun, and the light it generates does not illuminate things but obscures them—blinding you with its constant, overbright effulgences, pounding on you with its blasts of vaporous humidity, destabilizing you with its miragelike reflections and shimmering waves of nothingness. It is all glitter and dazzle, but it offers no substance, no tranquillity, no respite. Still, it was under this sun that he first saw the girl, and because he can't talk himself into giving her up, he continues to live with the sun and try to make his peace with it. Her name is Pilar Sanchez, and he met her six months ago in a public park, a purely accidental meeting late one Saturday afternoon in the middle of May, the unlikeliest of unlikely encounters. She was sitting on the grass reading a book, and not ten feet away from her he too was sitting on the grass reading a book, which happened to be the same book as hers, the same book in an identical soft-cover edition, The Great Gatsby , which he was reading for the third time since his father gave it to him as a present on his sixteenth birthday. He had been sitting there for twenty or thirty minutes, inside the book and therefore walled off from his surroundings, when he heard someone laugh. He turned, and in that first, fatal glimpse of her, as she sat there smiling at him and pointing to the title of her book, he guessed that she was even younger than sixteen, just axa0girl, really, and a little girl at that, a small adolescent girl wearing tight, cut-off shorts, sandals, and a skimpy halter top, the same clothes worn by every half-attractive girl throughout the lower regions of hot, sun-spangled Florida. No more than a baby, he said to himself, and yet there she was with her smooth, uncovered limbs and alert, smiling face, and he who rarely smiles at anyone or anything looked into her dark, animated eyes and smiled back at her. Six months later, she is still underage. Her driver's license says she is seventeen, that she won't be turning eighteen until May, and therefore he must act cautiously with her in public, avoid at all costs doing anything that might arouse the suspicions of the prurient, for a single telephone call to the police from some riled-up busybody could easily land him in jail. Every morning that is not a weekend morning or a holiday morning, he drives her to John F. Kennedy High School, where she is in her senior year and doing well, with aspirations for college and a future life as a registered nurse, but he does not drop her off in front of the building. That would be too dangerous. Some teacher or school official could catch sight of them in the car together and raise the alarm, and so he glides to a halt some three or four blocks before they reach Kennedy and lets her off there. He does not kiss her good-bye.... --This text refers to an alternate hardcover edition. From Booklist *Starred Review* Passionately literary, Auster nonetheless publishes as frequently as a genre author, writing poetic and brainy feigned procedurals featuring inadvertent outlaws. In his sixteenth novel, four flat-broke twentysomething searchers end up squatting in a funky abandoned house in Sunset Park, a rough Brooklyn neighborhood. Bing, the “sloppy bear” ringleader, plays drums and runs the Hospital for Broken Things, where he mends “relics” from a thriftier past. Melancholy artist Ellen is beset by erotic visions. Grad student Alice is researching pop-culture depictions of postwar sexual relationships. Miles is a fugitive. Poisoned by guilt over his stepbrother's death, he hasn't communicated with his loving father, a heroic independent publisher; his kind English professor stepmother; or his flamboyant actor mother for seven years. Lately he's been in Florida, “trashing out” foreclosed homes, stunned by what evicted people leave behind in anger and despair. Miles returns to New York after things turn dicey over his love affair with a wise-beyond-her-years Cuban American teenager. As always with the entrancing and ambushing Auster, every element is saturated with implication as each wounded, questing character's story illuminates our tragic flaws and profound need for connection, coherence, and beauty. In a time of daunting crises and change, Auster reminds us of lasting things, of love, art, and “the miraculous strangeness of being alive.” --Donna Seaman --This text refers to an alternate hardcover edition. "Paul Auster is one of those sages with confounding talent—confounding for one because he's simply that good... He belongs among Vonnegut, Roth, and DeLillo... Now is the time to herald the Post-Recession Novel. Sunset Park looks to be it." —Claire Howorth, The Daily Beast "Exquisitely crafted, surprisingly tender... xa0A story grounded in the potent emotions of love, loss, regret and vengeance, and the painful reality of current day calamities.... Auster fans and newcomers will find in Sunset Park his usual beautifully nuanced prose.... [and] a tremendous crash bang of an ending." —Jane Ciabattari, NPR "Books We Like" "A swift-moving, character-driven narrativexa0 [that] explores guilt, luck, and our enduring need for human contact and a sense of belonging. Powerful…Readers might find their one regret is seeing the book end." —Doug Childers, Richmond Times-Dispatch "A haymaker of a contemporary American novel, realistic and serious as your life." —Jim Higgins, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel "With a plot that encompasses war in the Middle East, economic recession and the perils of the publishing industry, a contemporary vitality distinguishes the latest from the veteran author…. Sure to please Auster fans and likely to attract new readers as well." — Kirkus (Starred Review) "Passionately literary… every element is saturated with implication as each wounded, questing character's story illuminates our tragic flaws and profound need for connection, coherence, and beauty. In a time of daunting crises and change, Auster reminds us of lasting things, of love, art, and ‘the miraculous strangeness of being alive.'" —Donna Seaman, Booklist (Starred Review) "Auster deftly balances minute details that evoke New York City, post-financial meltdown, with marvelously drawn characters bruised but unbowed by life's vicissitudes. He has an impressive array of literary nominations to his credit, but this should be the novel that brings him a broader readership." —Sally Bissell, Library Journal (Starred Review)xa0"Auster is in excellent form… a gratifying departure from the postmodern trickery he's known for, one full of crisp turns of phrase and keen insights." — Publishers Weekly " Sunset Park is sprawling but taut, toweringly ambitious in scope yet wholly intimate in the sphere of its characters' lives. While we still teeter on the brink of recession in an uncertain economic recovery—with millions still out of work and losing their homes—this novel is probably one of the most important literary touchstones of our era. And it's a true pleasure to read." —Jason Bennett, Library Journal "A clear-eyed and muscular fable about tough economic times." —Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal (Pre-Pub "My Picks") "The latest and arguably most user-friendly among the whip-smart fiction canon of Paul Auster... [A] winning novel... In Sunset Park , Auster seems to carry all of humanity inside him." —Jan Stuart, The Boston Globe "As remarkable as are Auster’s skill and experience, this kind of writing—this kind of ending—takes another, rarer attribute: tremendous courage." —David Takami, The Seattle Times "Unexpectedly searing... Sunset Park 's prodigal-son tale is somberly poignant, a study of how deeply the urge to connect runs." —Mark Athitakis, Salon.com "Classic Auster." —Joseph Peschel, The Kansas City Star "Resonate[s] with a warm acknowledgment of the tests and limitations of age and the vibrancy of experience... A lovely ride." —Kate Christensen, Elle "Auster has delivered an emotionally appealing book about the varieties of modern love... The son-father story is in fact the warmest line of narrative Auster has ever written, outside of the man and the dog story in his much earlier novel, Timbuktu, and it lends the entire novel a certain provident heat." —Alan Cheuse, Dallas News --This text refers to an alternate hardcover edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A
  • New York Times
  • Bestseller
  • From the bestselling author of
  • Invisible
  • and
  • The New York Trilogy
  • comes a new novel set during the 2008 economic collapse.
  • Sunset Park
  • opens with twenty-eight-year-old Miles Heller trashing out foreclosed houses in Florida, the latest stop in his flight across the country. When Miles falls in love with Pilar Sanchez, he finds himself fleeing once again, going back to New York, where his family still lives, and into an abandoned house of young squatters in Sunset Park, Brooklyn. Woven together from various points of view—that of Miles’s father, an independent book publisher trying to stay afloat, Miles’s mother, a celebrated actress preparing her return to the New York stage, and the various men and women who live in the house—“Auster seems to carry all of humanity inside him” (Jan Stuart,
  • The Boston Globe
  • ).

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(116)
★★★★
25%
(97)
★★★
15%
(58)
★★
7%
(27)
23%
(89)

Most Helpful Reviews

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HUGE DISAPPOINTMENT

I want to like Paul Auster's novels, I really do. And I hate to trash anyone's hard work in writing any book. But Paul Auster's not just some sensitive Aspiring Novelist in a class at your local community college. He's a well-respected, award-winning novelist who gets glowing reviews in the Sunday New York Times. Honestly, I envy the guy. He's a successful novelist with a solid body of work, a sixty-something baby-boom hipster living in Park Slope, Brooklyn. I don't want to be Paul Auster but I want his life, or some facsimile thereof. But Sunset Park is so poorly conceived and badly written that giving it one star is generous on my part. I looked forward to reading this book because it's by Paul Auster and because it's set in Brooklyn, where I grew up and ache to move back to but for the astronomical rents. I'm glad I only paid $2.99 to read Sunset Park on my Kindle rather than paying twenty-five bucks plus tax for a hardcover copy at Barnes & Noble. It doesn't even read like a dashed-off first draft of a novel. It reads more like tediously exhaustive character biographies with just a hint of what might hopefully become scenes. Unfortunately, there's not a single fully realized, fleshed-out scene in the entire book. It's all narrative, most of it wholly unnecessary backstory and pretentious intellectual twaddle. There's almost no dialogue and the little that's there is perfunctory at best and buried without quotations marks in the narrative slush. All the characters sound the same and speak mostly in the run-on manner of the narrative. And in the one scene that had any potential for drama--a mother and child reunion--rather than describe the actions of the characters Auster uses stage directions in parentheses (caution, LAZY WRITER at work). At that point, if I were reading a hard copy of the novel instead of an e-book on my Kindle I'd have thrown it against the wall. The only suspense in reading Sunset Park is wondering when it will begin and it never does. I'm mystified by the reviewers who rave about the beauty of Auster's language and style. There is no style here. It's one flat, dull, run-on sentence after another with not a single nicely turned phrase in the entire mess. Call me a Philistine, call me anything you want (just don't call me a Republican) but Stephen King on his worst day writes way better than this. Still, Auster has his moments, and his mystique. I enjoyed the hell out of Brooklyn Follies a couple of years ago, and more recently Hand to Mouth. Just to show I'm not really a mean person (Mean People Suck, don't you know), I'd give both of those books 5 Stars.
6 people found this helpful
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Paul Auster - Literary Narcissist

I think it was George Orwell who once advised writers to tear up any of their work they admired on rereading it and start again. Self-praise is no praise, to paraphrase the Bible.

If Paul Auster had followed this advice then he would have spared the reader pages of purple prose that are painful to read.

Two examples should be enough to warn anyone who opens this book what to expect.

Try this: "..the human body has shoulders. The human body has knees. The human body is an object and a subject, the inside of an outside that cannot be seen. The human body grows from the small of infancy to the large of adulthood, and then it begins to die. The human body has hips. The human body has elbows.."

Or this:"The joy of looking at her face again, the joy of holding her again, the joy of listening to her laugh again, the joy of hearing her voice again, the joy of watching her eat again, the joy of looking at her hands again...."

See what I mean? I would give no points out of 10 for this if I were a teacher of creative writing and tell Auster to tear it up and start all over again.

This kind of feeble, pretentious writing detracts from what is otherwise not such a bad story about a group of squatters living in an abandoned house in a district of New York.

The characters are a bunch of self-centered American neurotics living in physical or mental squalor - including a 28-year-old drop-out who is in fear of the police because he has been living with an underage Cuban girl, his fat friend who poses naked for a frustrated female would-be artist, his mother who is acting in a Samuel Beckett play in which she is buried up to the neck throughout the performance - and assorted other weirdoes from Woody Allen land.

Despite it depressing nature, this kind of material can produce literature as in Russell Banks' books "Trailerpark" and Continental Drift".

Unfortunately, this is not the case here as, despite his lofty reputation, Paul Auster is no Russell Banks.
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Credit where credit's due

Reading the reviews of others, I see Mr Auster has a love/hate relationship with his readers, and I have to say he didn't get off to a good start with me. My first contact with this author was an article in a Turkish newspaper informing me that he was refusing to come to Turkey in sympathy with imprisoned 'journalists' - and that the Prime Minister of Turkey had said, 'What do we care if he comes or not?'

As a big fan of PM Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, and one who lacks patience with arrogant foreigners who criticise the country without bothering to set foot in the place or even to check their facts, I wrote an article of my own on the subject ([...]). I did, however, preface my remarks by admitting that I had not actually read any of Mr Auster's novels.

Recently I came across 'Sunset Park' on my son's bookshelves, and, out of curiosity, took a peek. I can honestly say that it caught and held my attention to the extent that I bought a copy of my own so that I could finish reading it. It is well written, the characters are convincing, and the story-line got me involved. My only criticism, and it is a fairly serious one, is for the ending. I had the impression that Mr Auster was well over his deadline for completion, his publisher was screaming that he wanted the finished manuscript by tomorrow, so he hastily brought the book to a close and handed it over. Disappointing, I must say.

And I would like to reiterate my invitation to Mr Auster to visit Turkey and judge for himself the level of freedom of speech that exists within its borders.
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The Strangeness of Being Alive

Set primarily in the Sunset Park community of Brooklyn following the financial crash of 2008, Paul Auster's novel "Sunset Park" combines elements of literary bohemia with reminders of "The Diary of Anne Frank". The book features four young people in their 20s who stryggle with themselves, with their artistic or literary ambitions, and with poverty. They find themselves squatting in a ramshackle abandoned small house in Brooklyn which New York City has seized for back taxes. The four young people live in fear of the inevitable day when the city discovers their illegal presence in the house and evicts them. During the process, they struggle and perhaps thrive in spite of appearances.

Of the four squatters, the primary character is a 28 year old man named Miles Heller, a college dropout who had been working in south Florida removing property from repossessed homes. While in Florida, Miles became involved with a precocious 17 year old high school student, Pilar. Events force him to flee Florida, as he had fled his parents and college years earlier, and to accept the invitation of his old friend Bing to join him and two women in Sunset Park after Bing's girlfriend moved out. Bing runs a small repair shop called "The Hospital for Broken Things", but his primary interest in life is playing in a small jazz band.

There are two women squatters. Ellen struggles with selling real estate but her passion is art and painting. She turns from working on still lifes and buildings, where her work appears stilted, to the human body. Ellen is alone and sexually frustrated. The other woman in the house, Alice, is pursuing her PhD in English and working part town for an activist group concerned with the plight of dissident writers. Her dissertation topic is the 1946 film "The Best Years of our Lives" which deals with the problems of American servicemen returning home after WW II. The book is heavily freighted with symbolism -- with the film's suggesting something of the role that the period of squatting will play in the lives of the protagonists and the title of Bing's shop suggesting something of each of their lives.

There is also a great deal of baseball symbolism in this book using players both famous and obscure. The great promising pitcher for the Cleveland Indians, Herb Score, becomes emblematic of hard luck when his promising career ends as he is struck in the eye by a line drive. Auster also describes an obscure, undistinguished player, Jack "Lucky" Lohrke who faced three situations of almost certain death in WW II and lived to tell the tale. With baseball and bohemia the book is heavily atmospheric. It is at its best in the portrayal of the run-down neighborhoods of Brooklyn and of its struggling young people.

With all its symbolism and bohemian portraits, the book is short and a relatively fast read. It includes many characters besides the four young squatters. Most of this large group of secondary characters centers around Miles, and they include his father, who struggles to run a small publishing house, together with his stepmother, an academic, his mother, and actress, his stepbrother and his young girlfriend Pilar, the love of his life. The characters are well portrayed but the book is cluttered and has an almost dreamlike feel.

The book includes some highly poignant scenes and some beautifully lyrical writing. I was in love with much of the book and with its premise. As the book proceeds, the writing becomes overdone in places, with long, overly elaborate and mannered stringy sentences. There are also contrivances in the story line which make the book less effective. I liked the novel a great deal but was sorry my initial reaction was not fully sustained.

The novelist Siri Hustvedt, Auster's wife, suggested the phrase "the strangeness of being alive". When Ellen becomes deeply involved with the human figure the narrator of the tale observes: "She wants her human bodies to convey the miraculous strangeness of being alive -- no more than that, as much as all that. She doesn't concern herself with the idea of beauty. Beauty can take care of itself." The "strangeness of being alive", with all its enigmas, tragedy, coincidences and hope is the underlying theme of Paul Auster's novel.

Robin Friedman
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Sprawl Auster

Like many reviewers of this book, I am familiar with just about everything Paul Auster has published; also like many, his later works have generally left me wanting for the higher standard of his earlier works. Concerning "Sunset Park", I am disappointed to be once again split down the middle. The strength of Auster's storytelling and compulsively readable prose is present as ever; however, the lack of imaginativeness is striking for an author of Auster's reputation, and for a book so heavily reliant on character study, none truly stands out as memorable. There are simply too many disparate figures vying for position, and full development of any one of them seems compromised for the sake of such crowdedness. For all his apparent problems, the central character of Miles Heller is drawn from a somewhat idealized state (manly, mysterious, magnetically attractive, stoic, breaks jaw of bully policeman); the reader has no trouble understanding him, but this is not the same as really knowing him. His squatter friends are only moderately more compelling; although Bing, for one, is drawn with more plausible dimension than Miles, Alice and Ellen seem to more or less serve as hooks on which to hang wayward commentaries on the the nobility of the PEN American Center and the film "The Best Years of Our Lives" (Alice), and more or less a philosophic aside on the transformative valuation of the human body (Ellen). In the way it alternates between spotlights on a handful of characters, this novel reminded me of Auster's film "Smoke" - yet by contrast, even as many of that film's characters were presented with less background detail, their respective stories were interlaced into a satisfyingly cohesive story in and of itself. That never really happens here. The narrative structure itself is almost wholly subjugated to the emphasis on individual sketches, framed at times with both Auster's usual predilections (chance, baseball, Beckett, sexuality/eroticism) as well as some of his aforementioned obsessions and choice observations of the moment. The results feel sprawling, too many biographies clashing and straining to integrate.

The central problem I have with "Sunset Park" is that the more it angles to fill in the stories of these various squatters, stepmothers, publishers, authors, and actresses, the less intriguing it becomes. The first third of the novel held the level of genuine involvement I once was accustomed to from Auster, before everything is gradually brought to a fairly predictable head and more or less resolved (despite Auster's attempt to derail the impression of a neat, hopeful ending with a dramatic twist in the final few pages). Another problem I have is that Auster may have become almost *too* readable - the sentences and sequences don't merely flow so much as they tumble hurriedly like dominoes into one another, and it's all one can do to not chug along breathlessly. The reader almost begins to feel in some sense unchallenged by the lack of any discernible pause. "Sunset Park", in the vein of much of Auster's recent work, is written seemingly by someone in a great hurry to get as many words and books written as he possibly can before his time is through.

Paul Auster remains a vital author whose output is invariably worth reading. There is tremendous humanity, affecting honesty, and generous insight to be found in all of his writing, and "Sunset Park" is no exception. A deep appreciation and tangible kinship will always exist for a man who writes of the "Hospital of Broken Things", can speculate so thoughtfully about objects left behind in foreclosed homes, and meditates on the "things that don't happen, the lives not lived, the wars not fought, the shadow worlds that run parallel to the world we take to be the real world." It would nevertheless be my preference that his prodigious pace could be quelled in the interest of leaving us with books which, though perhaps fewer in number, are more carefully considered and truly representative of his literary prowess.
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Four Stars

Good Book Auster is a great writer.
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Sunset Park

I know Sunset Park in Brooklyn, NY and I know the Green-Wood Cemetery. I had hoped the book would convey the feel of the area. I was interested by the story of the 20 somethings and the lives leading up to today.
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HARD TO LIKE ... HARD TO FORGET

I just discovered Paul Auster. His readers, I've learned, seem to be intensely devoted. He's won numerous awards. I can understand both of those things.

Actually, I came upon SUNSET PARK by chance, not knowing that this was a book of many layers and characters, rather plotless, or that the author was deeply influencd by poststructuralist French philosophy and American transcendentalist philosophy. But, within a few pages, it came to me also ... like a bell, that this was no ordinary book, but a novel written by an extraordinary writer.

I began SUNSET PARK with an open mind, trying to enter the world of the main character, Miles Heller, a 28 year old man from an east-coast backgound, well-educated, but now, a man without structure in a state of 'nothingness' with a fixation for 'abandoned things' working as a trash-remover from discarded houses in Florida. Miles is consumed by guilt over an accident that took his brother's life years earlier and he has given up everything for an ascetic life balanced only by hs love for a 17 year old local girl, an extraordinarily intelligent girl named Pilar.

What struck me first was that this was a book more' told' than 'shown' - against all rules of fiction. Long paragrahs, little action, little dialogue. And yet, I found it entirely compelling, caught by perfectly drawn characters who suffer with uncertainty about their own identity. Most of whom, like Miles, have severed all contact with their past, their family and their friends, and are among the abandoned 'things' of the world.

Secondly, the characters are lost in their unease and searching for their true identity. As the book opens, Miles is withdrawn from - altho he will connect again tenatively in the story with - his prominent book publisher father. And, he will meet again with his actress mother who'd abandoned him to his father many years earlier.

Auster's enormous talent for 'telling' held me as the book unfolded to introduce characters, not all lovable or even particularly interesting in themselves, but whose lives carry the books's theme - the search for personal meaning - (as Auster suggests) through coincidences and random connections.. The characters in SUNSET PARK don't really touch your heart for you can hardly know and love them as they don't seem to know or love themselves.

If there is a plot in this book it is that each character must go through a process in the novel to reconnect to the world.

I have thought about SUNSET PARK a fair bit since reading it. I don't agree personally with Auster's rather desperate view of life - ambiguity within one's self and numbing loss and the constant contradictions and uncertainties of life. But this is his theme and I respect it. There is more depth here in SUNSET PARK than in many contemporary books. I have not forgotten his characters.
Still, a certain sadness prevails.

Auster once said, "I believe the world is filled with strange events. Reality is a great deal more mysterious than we ever give it credit for."
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flawed but worth reading

This novel starts with the unanticipated ramifications of an act of spontaneous violence and ends looking to the consequences of a second such act for the main character, Miles Heller. Your enjoyment of the book will probably stand or fall with whether you can engage with his uncompromising and guilt-ridden character. In between beginning and end, the narrative expands to become a parallel exploration of 4-5 interlinked characters, including Miles, all of whose life choices are to varying degrees unsustainable. Although they are connected in a narrative sense, they are all also on their own journeys. Free will, the limits of our control over our own lives and the extent to which we (sometimes inadvertently)shape each others lives are at the heart of the book. Auster is a very gifted writer and the book is an easy read. His plotting of the character's emotional development rings true for the most part, although there are some contrived plot developments and some aspects of the characterisation are not credible. It is a low-key, reflective style of narrative, which I think led some reviewers to suggest that nothing happens in the book. I wouldn't say that is the case, but action serves to support the narrative about the characters rather than to serve its own purposes.
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Not the Auster I know and love.

This is my fourth Auster book. The first three were "The Brooklyn Follies" - a group of people connected through trying circumstance, "Timbukto" - featuring people connected through a marvelous dog, and "Man in The Dark" - the story of an elderly man who has mentally lost his connection with the real world but is instead connected into a parallel universe. In this one, Auster gives us four principal characters and five secondary characters, but their connection to each other is loose at best. Each character gets his/her own section or two or three of the book, individual chapters so to speak, with very little interaction between any of them. There is no sustained dialogue. In fact, there are no quotation marks anywhere to be found. The book reads like an extensive outline of the characters' traits, problems, and challenges. Each of the characters is strong enough to keep me reading to find out what happens to them, but even the outcome leaves one hanging. If this were the first Auster book I had read, I wouldn't look for others. However, 3 out of 4 ain't bad, so I will continue to read more of his books in the future.