The New York Trilogy is a brilliant philosophical adventure
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The New York Trilogy is a brilliant philosophical adventure

The New York Trilogy is a brilliant philosophical adventure

Posted on 15 October, 2020

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314 pages

Original language

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The New York Trilogy is a collection of three short novels, City of Glass, Ghosts, and The Locked Room, that came out between 1985 and 1986. These books elevated Paul Auster to fame and showed how he used dramatic effect in a post-modern literary setting. The plots of the books involve ambiguity, as Auster experiments with the detective genre. In fact, each of the books features a real detective and an apparent mystery to solve. However, the existential quest always overlaps and takes the place of an actual inquiry.

Different kinds of investigation

Sometimes the investigation involves the language itself, in particular the role of names in the stories. For example, the easiness of transforming into somebody else through changing a name, a habit of the characters in the books, becomes a symptom of a fragmented personality.

In City of Glass, a writer of detective fiction becomes a private investigator and finds himself going mad as he investigates a case. The second book, Ghosts, involves a man named Blue who is a private investigator trained by a man named Brown, investigating Mr. Black, for a client called Mr. White. The Locked Room is the story of an author with writer’s block who inveigles himself into the life and family of another writer.

Chance and mortality

The New York Trilogy is a brilliant philosophical adventure everybody should reflect upon. Many writers have treated the themes of chance and mortality. Among them, there are Thomas Pinchon, Don De Lillo, David Foster Wallace, and Haruki Murakami.

In an interview, Joseph Mallia asks Auster about the genre of The New York Trilogy, and if he can consider it a mystery novel. This is what he answered: “I tried to use certain genre conventions to get to another place, another place altogether. The question of who is who and whether or not we are who we think we are. The whole process that Quinn undergoes in that book— and the characters in the other two, as well — is one of stripping away to some barer condition in which we have to face up to who we are. Or who we aren’t. It finally comes to the same thing”.


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