The Invention of Solitude

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The Invention of Solitude
InventionOfSolitude.jpg
First edition
Author Paul Auster
LanguageEnglish
Genre Memoir
Publisher Sun Publishing
Publication date
1982
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint
Pages173
ISBN 0-915342-37-5

The Invention of Solitude is Paul Auster's debut memoir, published in 1982. The book is divided into two parts. The first part, Portrait of an Invisible Man, is about the sudden death of Auster's father. The second part, The Book of Memory, is a narrative in the third person.

Contents

Development

Samuel Auster, the father of American writer Paul Auster, died in January 1979. [1] Shortly after receiving word of Samuel Auster's death, Paul Auster resolved to write a book about his father, thinking that if he didn't, Samuel Auster's "life will vanish along with him". [2]

In the course of writing, Auster struggled for months to write the second part of what would become The Invention of Solitude with a first person point of view; he ultimately instead narrated it in the third person. [3]

Publication

Sun published The Invention of Solitude in New York in 1982. [4] It was Auster's debut memoir. [5] Other editions were published by Penguin Books in 1982 [6] and Faber & Faber in 2005. [7]

Synopsis

The Invention of Solitude is split into two parts, respectively titled Portrait of an Invisible Man and The Book of Memory. [8] According to Encyclopædia Britannica , The Invention of Solitude is "both a memoir about the death of his father and a meditation on the act of writing". [9]

Portrait of an Invisible Man

This first part of The Invention of Solitude is about the unexpected death of Samuel Auster, [2] and it describes the latter's life, influence, [10] and idiosyncracies. [2]

The Book of Memory

The book's second part is narrated in the third person, with Auster calling himself "A.". [11] The text contains experimental literary techniques influenced by French writing of the time and passages of literary and art criticism about creators such as Carlo Collodi and Johannes Vermeer. [2]

Notes

Sources

Further reading

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