Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Authors - Auster Paul
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 66    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Auster Paul:     more books (100)
  1. Timbuktu: A Novel by Paul Auster, 2000-05-01
  2. In the Country of Last Things by Paul Auster, 1988-05-02
  3. Oracle Night: A Novel by Paul Auster, 2009-04-28
  4. The Book of Illusions: A Novel by Paul Auster, 2009-10-27
  5. Ghosts (New York Trilogy) by Paul Auster, 1987-07-07
  6. The Red Notebook: True Stories by Paul Auster, 2002-06-17
  7. Sophie Calle: Double Game by Sophie Calle, 2007-09-01
  8. Neon Lit: Paul Auster's City of Glass by Paul Auster, David Mazzucchelli, et all 1994-08
  9. The Art of Hunger: Essays, Prefaces, Interviews by Paul Auster, 2001-11-01
  10. Travels in the Scriptorium: A Novel by Paul Auster, 2007-12-26
  11. City of Glass: The Graphic Novel by Paul Auster, 2004-08-01
  12. Leviathan. by Paul Auster, 1996-12-01
  13. Tombuctu (Spanish Edition) by Paul Auster, 2007-11-05
  14. Leviatan (Compactos Anagrama) (Spanish Edition) by Paul Auster, 2003-07-15

21. Featured Author: Paul Auster
The new film by Wayne Wang and paul auster . . . is an inviting but evanescent film that does have casualness, curiosity value and a lot of talent on
http://www.nytimes.com/books/99/06/20/specials/auster.html
Featured Author: Paul Auster
With News and Reviews From the Archives of The New York Times In This Feature
  • Reviews of Paul Auster's Earlier Books
  • Articles About Paul Auster Related Links
  • Jim Shepard Reviews 'Timbuktu' (June 20, 1999)
  • First Chapter: 'Timbuktu' Audio
  • Paul Auster Interviewed by Bill Goldstein (May 5, 1999)
    Sigrid Estrada/ Henry Holt and Company, Inc. "Mr. Bones is a creature of great feeling. It became fascinating to me to write a book about feeling in that sense, in such a pure, unadulterated, unironic form. And in the end, I think of the book as a love story."
    from an audio interview with Paul Auster REVIEWS OF PAUL AUSTER'S EARLIER BOOKS:
  • The Invention of Solitude ,' reviewed by W. S. Merwin
    "The value of the book . . . emerges in spite of some of the means and flourishes employed to set it forth; even the most original and penetrating sections are sometimes impaired by the author's urge to supply a final weighty generalization."
  • The Random House Book of Twentieth-Century French Poetry ,' edited by Paul Auster. Reviewed by Peter Brooks
    "The overwhelming impression left by Mr. Auster's anthology is of riches prodigally offered. He has selected generously and with discernment."
  • 22. Paul Auster On LINEbreak
    paul performs some translated poem fragments of Mallarmé from his book The Invention of Solitude in RealAudio format (1 minute 40 seconds), or click here to
    http://wings.buffalo.edu/epc/linebreak/programs/auster/
    Paul Auster
    Click here to order a tape of this or any other LINEbreak program. Click here for tips on playing RealAudio files and on getting the best sound In his program Paul talks about A Tomb for Anatole The Art of Hunger ; he choses a section with origins in faded childhood memories. His program was recorded in his Brooklyn studio in 1995. Send email to the producers at linebrk@acsu.buffalo.edu jump to LINEbreak Home Page or jump to the EPC Home Page updated 22 May 1997 Martin Spinelli (martins@acsu.buffalo.edu)

    23. LITERATURE: INTERVIEW WITH PAUL AUSTER
    When novelist paul auster was invited to become a regular contributor to National Public Radio, he hesitated because he didn t want to write stories on
    http://www.3ammagazine.com/litarchives/nov2001/paul_auster_interview.html
    How to Survive Nuclear Attack
    Useful tips for surviving nuclear attack, dirty bombs, or suitcase nukes.
    American Hiroshima

    Tsunami

    Earthquake

    Tornado
    ...
    AN INTERVIEW WITH PAUL AUSTER

    "When novelist Paul Auster was invited to become a regular contributor to National Public Radio, he hesitated because he didn't want to write 'stories on command.' 'Why not solicit stories from listeners?' his wife, Siri Hustvedt, suggested. And so Auster asked for succinctly written true stories, and within a year, he received more than 4,000 submissions. He's read them all, some on the air, and selected 179 of the best and most representative to create a unique and unexpectedly affecting book. Here are clearly written and simply told stories 'by people of all ages and from all walks of life' that Auster, his wonder and respect palpable, organized into 10 intriguing categories: animals, objects, families, slapstick, strangers, war, love, death, dreams, and meditations." Dan Epstein Interviews Paul Auster
    AM: What was it like when you first met some of the people who wrote some of the stories?
    PA: You know how it is when you talk to people on the telephone and you always attach a body to the voice in your head. Then when you have the occasion to meet that person in every instance you’re wrong. That was true with the

    24. Auster, Paul | Authors | Guardian Unlimited Books
    paul auster (1947). Books constantly change even though the words are the same. The world changes, people change, people find a book at the right moment
    http://books.guardian.co.uk/authors/author/0,,-13,00.html
    @import url(/external/styles/global/0,,,00.css); Skip to main content Sign in Register Go to: Guardian Unlimited home UK news World news Comment is free blog Newsblog Sport blog Podcasts In pictures Video Archive search Arts and entertainment Books Business EducationGuardian.co.uk Environment Film Football Jobs Katine appeal Life and style MediaGuardian.co.uk Money Music The Observer Politics Science Shopping SocietyGuardian.co.uk Sport Talk Technology Travel Been there Audio Email services Special reports The Guardian The northerner The wrap Advertising guide Compare finance products Crossword Events / offers Feedback Garden centre GNM press office Graduate Guardian Bookshop GuardianEcostore GuardianFilms Headline service Help / contacts Information Living our values Newsroom Reader Offers Soulmates dating Style guide Syndication services Travel offers TV listings Weather Web guides Working for us Guardian Abroad Guardian Weekly Money Observer Public Learn Guardian back issues Observer back issues Guardian Professional
    Jobs
    Search: Guardian Unlimited Web Home Reviews Guardian Review By genre ... Search all jobs
    Search Books
    PAUL AUSTER
    "Books constantly change even though the words are the same. The world changes, people change, people find a book at the right moment and it answers something, some need or desire."

    25. Paul Auster - Trailer - Showtimes - Cast - Movies - New York Times
    A biography and related information about paul auster.
    http://movies.nytimes.com/person/188298/Paul-Auster/filmography
    //for google ads google_hints = "Paul Auster"; //> @import url(http://graphics8.nytimes.com/css/section/arts/movies/screen/200705/people.css); Movies All NYT Saturday, January 26, 2008
    Movies
    Search Movies, People and Showtimes by ZIP Code Top-Rated in Theaters Select a Movie Title 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Da... The Business of Being Born Nanking Persepolis The Diving Bell and the Bu... Juno Starting Out in the Evenin... Bella The Water Horse: Legend of... The Great Debaters More Movies... More in Movies »
    Paul Auster
    Box Office Top 5
  • Cloverfield 27 Dresses The Bucket List Juno ... National Treasure: Book of Secrets
  • TimesPulse
    The most popular movies among NYTimes.com readers.
  • 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days Rambo Cloverfield Meet the Spartans ... What's This? Denotes a New York Times Critic's Pick
    Filmography
    The Inner Life of Martin Frost (2007)
    Role: Characters as Source Material, Producer, Screenplay, Director
    Read NYT Review »
    The Center of the World (2001)
    Role: From Story, Story By
  • 26. Powells.com Interviews - Paul Auster
    The Book of paul auster paul auster has been writing beautiful, metaphysical, mysterious novels for a long time now. Some of them are funnier than others
    http://www.powells.com/authors/auster.html?&PID=12

    27. Paul Auster Interview With Don Swaim
    Listen to the paul Aster interview with Don Swaim in RealAudio.
    http://wiredforbooks.org/paulauster/
    Wired For Books home Don Swaim Interviews
    Audio Interview with Paul Auster
    Paul Auster, author of Oracle Night The New York Trilogy: City of Glass, Ghosts, the Locked Room Invention of Solitude and many more, talks about his writing in this 1987 interview with Don Swaim. By the time he was 9 or 10, he was already starting to write poems and stories. From there, he continued to write throughout his life and became a published writer. When he is writing, he tries to create a character that struggles to stay human in the midst of horror. Listen to the Paul Auster interview with Don Swaim, 1987
    (22 min. 02 sec.) Download Free RealPlayer
    or
    Search the RealPlayer Archives

    for a player that will work with older computers
    (note: version 5.0 or higher is required) For many years most of the best writers of the English language found their way to Don Swaim's CBS Radio studio in New York. Wired for Books is proud to webcast these interviews in RealAudio. Wired for Books home Ohio University

    28. Telling - The New York Review Of Books
    Space limitations oblige me to dispense with some of the comment that seems to me pertinent to Mr. paul auster s review of two books of mine in your issue
    http://www.nybooks.com/articles/9079
    Home Your account Current issue Archives ...
    October 2, 1975
    Telling
    By Laura (Riding) Jackson , Reply by Paul Auster
    In response to The Return of Laura Riding August 7, 1975 To the Editors Space limitations oblige me to dispense with some of the comment that seems to me pertinent to Mr. Paul Auster's review of two books of mine in your issue of August 7th. Communicated views of it of friends impressed on me the need of comment. One thought it "rather nice." Another thought that the unfavorable-favorable wavering of the review established its "honesty." Mr. Auster's central concern is, patently to me, with his own achievement as a poet. It is in this respect that my poetic work troubles him. He balances condescension to it as not dismissible (though the work of an as-dead poet despite my "return") against the challenge he sees in it to his own achievement. In evaluating it recently in the magazine Chelsea #33 , he described a solution to this problem for disturbed poets: to transcend the offending merits of my poems. A third friend called the review condescending, which seemed mild; but it suits. The underlying tone, however, is whining. He wanted the review to sound "nice," also, "honest." It is an attempt to extinguish me graciously. Friends like to see one's work receive attention, especially when it is rare. in language a not-human kind of truth, a conception combining insensitivity to my poetic and linguistic ideals, and ignorance of my idea of truth.

    29. Literature-Map: Paul Auster
    What else do readers of paul auster read? What else do readers of paul auster read? The closer two writers are, the more likely someone will like both
    http://www.literature-map.com/paul auster.html
    gnod literature map Paul Auster
    Paul Auster
    What else do readers of Paul Auster read?
    The closer two writers are, the more likely someone will like both of them.
    Click on a name to travel along.
    Next writer: Irvine Welsh Paul Auster Haruki Murakami Italo Calvino ... Donna Tartt

    30. The Elegant Variation: TEV GIVEAWAY: PAUL AUSTER TWOFER
    At any rate, we re moving up the Friday giveaway a day, and we re coming at you with a pair of paul auster titles Travels in the Scriptorium and The Inner
    http://marksarvas.blogs.com/elegvar/2007/12/tev-giveaway-pa.html
    The Elegant Variation
    A Literary Weblog.
    A Guardian Top 10 Literary Blog * A Forbes "Best of the Web" Pick * A Los Angeles Magazine Top Los Angeles Blog
    "Really brave ... or really stupid" - NPR
    WORTHY READINGS
    BEST SMALL PRESSES
    Barking at the Moon
    • ** Recently Updated
    TEV DEFINED
    • The Elegant Variation is "Fowler’s (1926, 1965) term for the inept writer’s overstrained efforts at freshness or vividness of expression. Prose guilty of elegant variation calls attention to itself and doesn’t permit its ideas to seem naturally clear. It typically seeks fancy new words for familiar things, and it scrambles for synonyms in order to avoid at all costs repeating a word, even though repetition might be the natural, normal thing to do: The audience had a certain bovine placidity, instead of The audience was as placid as cows. Elegant variation is often the rock, and a stereotype, a clich©, or a tired metaphor the hard place between which inexperienced or foolish writers come to grief. The familiar middle ground in treating these homely topics is almost always the safest. In untrained or unrestrained hands, a thesaurus can be dangerous."
    Subscribe to this blog's feed Your email address: Powered by FeedBlitz
    SEARCH ME
    Other Stuff

    31. Paul Auster (1947-)
    paul auster and the Crisis of the Individual (CarlCarsten Springer, Univ. of Hamburg) Why Write? by paul auster (National Endowments for the Arts)
    http://www.nagasaki-gaigo.ac.jp/ishikawa/amlit/a/auster21.htm
    Paul Auster (1947-)
    b. Feb. 3, 1947, Newark, N.J., U.S.
    American novelist, essayist, translator, and poet whose complex mystery novels are often concerned with the search
    for identity and personal meaning.
    After graduating from Columbia University (M.A., 1970), Auster moved to France, where he began translating the works
    of French writers and publishing his own work in American journals. He gained renown for a series of experimental
    detective stories published collectively as The New York Trilogy (1987). It comprises City of Glass (1985), about a crime
    novelist who becomes entangled in a mystery that causes him to assume various identities; Ghosts (1986), about a
    private eye known as Blue who is investigating a man named Black for a client named White; and The Locked Room
    (1986), the story of an author who, while researching the life of a missing writer for a biography, gradually assumes the
    identity of that writer. Other books that feature protagonists who are obsessed with chronicling someone else's life are the novels Moon Palace (1989) and Leviathan The Invention of Solitude (1982) is both a memoir about the death of his father and a meditation on the act of writing. Auster's other writings include the verse volumes

    32. Paul Auster. Biography And Complete Works
    Life and works of paul auster, links and much more.
    http://www.booksfactory.com/writers/auster.htm
    Search for a writer:
    (enter last name)
    Or browse our list:

    A
    B C D ...
    Books of the World
    Author: Auster, Paul
    Date and Place of birth:
    Feb. 3, 1947, Newark, N.J., U.S.
    Life and Works:

    American novelist, essayist, translator, and poet whose complex mystery novels are often concerned with the search for identity and personal meaning. Auster earned his B.A. and M.A. in English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University, where he discovered French poets and started his writing career as a poet, translator, and essayist. But he told Marcelle Thiebaux in Publishers Weekly, "My dream was always to write novels. Absolutely. From the beginning. Writing novels gives you the opportunity to explore all sides of yourselfmore than anything else I can think of." After graduating from Columbia University (M.A., 1970), Auster moved to France, where he began translating the works of French writers and publishing his own work in American journals. For years he labored in relative obscurity until the mid-1980s when he began to attract critical attention with his New York Trilogy , a trio of post-modern and experimental detective novels. Completed in 1987, the trilogy marked him as a talent to watch. It comprises

    33. Scriptorium - Paul Auster
    This page contains links to sites on paul auster, and will one day contain a full Scriptorium page.
    http://www.themodernword.com/scriptorium/auster.html
    Paul Auster
    (b. 1947) Scriptorium submission guidelines
    News
    Collected Poems The composers are Milton Babbitt, Lee Hyla, Louis Karchin, Roger Reynolds, and Charles Wuorinen; and each of the works is a duet for one voice and one instrument, performed by The Group for Contemporary Music. Sunday and Monday 12/13 September at 8pm (same program each night) Peter Lewis Theater, Guggenheim Museum, 1071 Fifth Avenue (between 88th and 89th Streets) TICKETS:$18 ($15 for Guggenheim Members, Students and Seniors)
    To order please call the Box Office at 212 423 3587, Monday-Friday, 1-5pm. Or visit the Guggenheim Museum. Web Site Links and Resources The Modern Word Oracle Night Review Oracle Night Offsite The Definitive Paul Auster Website Utility Amazon.com Search A dvanced Book Exchange eBay Search ... Send email to the Great Quail

    34. Paul Auster - The Prince Of Asturias Foundation
    paul auster novelist, poet and scriptwriter - was born in Newark, New Jersey, USA, in 1947. After graduating from Columbia University in English and
    http://www.fundacionprincipedeasturias.org/ing/04/premiados/trayectorias/trayect
    js js js js js idseccion='01ing'; titulo='Paul Auster :: Trayectoria';

    35. BBC - Radio 4 Front Row - 31/05/04
    John Wilson talks to the American novelist paul auster about his latest novel paul auster on the creative spark, why he’s obsessed with stationery and
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/arts/frontrow/frontrow_20040531.shtml
    Home
    TV

    Radio

    Talk
    ... Radio 4 PROGRAMME FINDER: A-Z Directory Listen Again Download/Podcast What's On Listings ... Presenters PROGRAMME GENRES: Arts and Drama Science History Factual ...
    Help

    Like this page?
    Send it to a friend!

    FRONT ROW
    MISSED A PROGRAMME?

    Go to the Listen Again page
    PROGRAMME INFO Weekdays 19.15 - 19.45 Radio 4's daily live magazine programme reporting on the world of arts, literature, film, media and music. 
    EMAIL FRONT ROW 
    with your comments or question. LISTEN TO THE LATEST PROGRAMME Listen to the programme clips with each feature. PRESENTERS Mark Lawson, Francine Stock and John Wilson Mark Lawson BIOGRAPHY INTERVIEW QUIZ ... QUIZ LATEST PROGRAMME Monday 31 May 31 May 2004 Presented by John Wilson Listen to the programme PAUL AUSTER SPECIAL John Wilson talks to the American novelist Paul Auster about his latest novel Oracle Night which has echoes of earlier work including The New York Trilogy and Leviathan Once again, coincidence and the unpredictability of life are central themes and this, Auster reveals, all goes back to an experience he had aged 14 when he narrowly escaped death and was forced to confront the fragility of his own life. Paul Auster on the creative spark, why he’s obsessed with stationery and being thought cleverer than he is.

    36. The Paris Review - The Art Of Fiction No. 178
    paul auster. © Nancy Crampton. paul auster auster I’ve always written by hand. Mostly with a fountain pen, but sometimes with a pencil—especially for
    http://www.theparisreview.com/viewinterview.php/prmMID/121

    Return to Interview Archive Index

    PAUL AUSTER
    The Art of Fiction No. 178 Interviewed by Michael Wood Issue 167, Fall 2003 Purchase this issue View a manuscript page
    AUSTER
    INTERVIEWER
    And you write in notebooks. Not legal pads or loose sheets of paper.
    AUSTER
    Yes, always in notebooks. And I have a particular fetish for notebooks with qaudrille lines, the little squares.
    SEARCH Full Search E-mail this page Print View Cart ... Check Out
    INTERVIEW Kenzaburo Oe FICTION Graham Joyce Alistair Morgan ENCOUNTER Liao Yiwu POETRY Louise Glück Bob Hicok PHOTOGRAPHS Nicolás Haro WEB EXCLUSIVE Liao Yiwu Related Links Terms and Conditions Contact Site Map

    37. Paul Auster And Graham Leggat @ Kanbar Hall, JCCSF - Flavorpill San Francisco
    With a nuanced literary voice that frequently borders on the surreal, paul auster boasts an impressive CV of over a dozen novels (including the acclaimed
    http://flavorpill.com/sanfrancisco/events/2008/1/16/paul-auster-in-conversation-
    San Francisco Cover by Monty Montgomery This event has passed.
    MORE FLAVOR : Discussion The Inner Life of Martin Frost with Paul Auster and Graham Leggat
    • Paul Auster
    When
    Wed Jan 16 (7pm)
    Where
    Kanbar Hall, JCCSF (3200 California St, 415.292.1200)
    Price Details
    Event Info With a nuanced literary voice that frequently borders on the surreal, Paul Auster boasts an impressive CV of over a dozen novels (including the acclaimed New York Trilogy ) and a handful of self-directed films. Auster's latest movie, The Inner Life of Martin Frost, is a bleak metaphysical exploration of the tangled world of a reclusive author (David Thewlis). Following the screening, a conversation hosted by Graham Leggat, executive director of the San Francisco Film Society, provides an intimate peek into Auster's mind and creative process. Tanya Feldman
    Find Things to Do
    Flavorpill is your daily guide to cultural events
    Enter your email address:
    Read the blog
    Get to Know Us
    Flavorpill publishes a series of online magazines, covering art, books, music, world news, and cultural events in six cities. Coming soon:

    38. Paul Auster News - The New York Times
    News about paul auster. Commentary and archival information about paul auster from The New York Times.
    http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/a/paul_auster/index.h
    @import url(http://graphics8.nytimes.com/css/topic/screen/200704/topic.css); Saturday, January 26, 2008
    Times Topics

    39. Paul Auster
    A bibliography of paul auster s books, with the latest releases, covers, descriptions and availability.
    http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/a/paul-auster/
    Fantastic Fiction Authors A Paul Auster Preferences google_ad_client = "pub-4149752303753296";google_alternate_ad_url = "http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/frames/banner.htm";google_ad_width = 468;google_ad_height = 60;google_ad_format = "468x60_as";google_ad_type = "text_image";google_ad_channel ="5061332721";google_color_border = "6699CC";google_color_bg = "003366";google_color_link = "FFFFFF";google_color_url = "AECCEB";google_color_text = "AECCEB"; Home Awards New Books Coming Soon ... Years Browse Authors A H O V ... U
    Paul Auster
    Search Authors Search Books About Paul Auster Paul Auster was born in Newark, New Jersey, in 1947 to middle class parents. After attending Columbia University he lived in France for four years. Since returning to America in 1974, he has published poems, essays, novels and translations. New and Forthcoming Hardbacks The Inner Life of Martin Frost New and Forthcoming Paperbacks Selected Prose Series New York Trilogy City of Glass Ghosts The Locked Room The New York Trilogy (omnibus) Novels In the Country of Last Things Moon Palace The Music of Chance Auggie Wren's Christmas Story ... Travels in the Scriptorium Omnibus Smoke / Blue in the Face Three Films: Smoke, Blue in the Face, and Lulu on the Bridge

    40. Columbia College Today
    paul auster ’69’s books are not always available on local bookseller’s shelves — or so it seems. That’s because his novels have earned an unofficial badge
    http://www.college.columbia.edu/cct/mar_apr06/cover.php
    Contact CCT Advertise with CCT University College Alumni Home
    The Growing Cult of

    Outsider on the

    Inside
    Young Lions of ... Next
    COVER STORY
    The Brooklyn Follies , was published by Henry Holt and Co. Add a few volumes of autobiography, several books of poetry, some essays and three film scripts ( Smoke Blue in the Face and Lulu on the Bridge The Brooklyn Follies
    and brings them back for more. Oracle Night and The Book of Illusions The Brooklyn Follies PHOTO: COURTESY HENRY HOLT AND CO. Her words echo Smoke and Blue in the Face Guardian Auster fans don't need the new book to do any convincing. A new book by Auster is reason enough to read it. But even devoted fans have to start somewhere, and most start with The New York Trilogy , particularly the first novella, City of Glass City of Glass Vertigo The New York Trilogy City of Glass into a graphic novel was named by The Comics Journal as one of the best 100 comics of the 20th century and a bookstore manager commented on NPR that The New York Trilogy was the most frequently filched Auster novel, including one incident where a stack of 20 copies was taken in one fell swoop.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 2     21-40 of 66    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20

    free hit counter