Miami Herald

Paul Auster, 77, postmodern author behind ‘The New York Trilogy,’ ‘Smoke’

- BY NARDINE SAAD Los Angeles Times

Paul Auster, the bestsellin­g postmodern author, noir novelist and screenwrit­er behind “Smoke,” “Lulu on the Bridge” and “The Inner Life of Martin Frost,” has died. He was 77.

“The New York Trilogy” and “4 3 2 1” author’s death was confirmed Wednesday by his literary representa­tives at Carol Mann Agency, according to the Associated Press. No details about his death were given and representa­tives for the agency did not immediatel­y respond Wednesday to The Times’ request for comment.

The New York Timesrepor­ted that Auster died Tuesday evening at his home in Brooklyn from complicati­ons of lung cancer. The writer had been diagnosed with cancer in 2022.

Auster, who also enjoyed a rich career as a poet and memoirist, was awarded several prizes during his prolific career, including the Prince of Asturias Award for Literature, the Prix Médicis étranger, an Independen­t Spirit Award and the Premio Napoli. He was also a member of the American Academy of

Arts and Letters, the American Academy of

Arts and Sciences and was a Commandeur de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres.

Referred to as the “dean of American post-modernists” and “the most meta of American meta-fictional writers,” Auster crafted fiction that hinged on reality but also challenged the definition of it. His breakthrou­gh 1985 novel, “City of Glass,” combined hard-boiled detective fiction with existentia­l inquiry and featured a character called Paul Auster. Its 1986 follow-ups, “Ghosts” and “The

Locked Room” comprised Auster’s famed “New York Trilogy.” His 1994 fable, “Mr. Vertigo,” featured quite literal flights of fancy; and his 2008 work “Man in the Dark” created dreamscape­s that conjured parallel visions of modern-day America, according to L.A. Times contributo­r Malcolm Forbes.

His work imposed a sense of irreality on his readers, and his oeuvre was replete with writers and the themes of the elusivenes­s of human nature and the insufficie­ncy of language to investigat­e the matter (or even to faithfully record experience), according to one L.A. Times review.

Auster’s other works included the nonfiction compilatio­ns “Groundwork” and “Talking to Strangers”; a family memoir, “The Invention of Solitude”; the novel “Leviathan” and the poetry collection “White Space.” In 2021, he chronicled the life and work of 19thcentur­y author Stephen Crane in “Burning Boy.” His most recent novel, 2023’s “Baumgardne­r,” told the story of a widowed professor haunted by mortality and was considered a late-career triumph that cut back on his usual “postmodern pyrotechni­cs.”

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Paul Auster

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