The Book of Illusions

The Book of Illusions

infobox Book |
name = The Book of Illusions


image_caption =
author = Paul Auster
country = United States
language = English
series =
genre = Novel
publisher = Faber & Faber
release_date = 2002
media_type = Print (Hardback & Paperback)
pages = 232 pp (hardback edition)
isbn = ISBN 0-571-17092-7 (hardback edition)
preceded_by = Timbuktu
followed_by = Oracle Night

"The Book of Illusions" is a novel by American writer Paul Auster, published in 2002.

Plot introduction

Set in the late 1980s, the story is written from the perspective of David Zimmer, a university professor who, after losing his wife and children in a plane crash, falls into a routine of depression and isolation. After seeing one of the silent comedies of Hector Mann, an actor missing since the 1920s, he decides to occupy himself by watching all of Mann's films and writing a book about them. The publishing of the book, however, triggers another series of events that draw Zimmer even deeper into the actor's past.

The middle of the story is largely dedicated to telling the life story of Hector Mann, involving his self-imposed exile from his past life and career, which serves as a form of penance for his role in the death of a woman who loved him. In his last days, his wife sends a letter to Zimmer, requesting him to come to their New Mexico home to bear witness to Mann's final legacy of films. The events that ensue form the overarching story of Zimmer's rehabilitation from his reclusive state, and his coming to terms with the manner in which his family was killed.

Links to other works

The book makes many direct references to the autobiography of François-René de Chateaubriand, "Mémoires d'outre-tombe"; one of Zimmer's ongoing projects is producing a new translation of the book.

"The Book of Illusions" revisits a number of plot elements seen in Auster's first major work, "The New York Trilogy". These include:
* The protagonist driving himself into isolation
* Extended focus on a character's (fictional) body of work
* Writers as characters
* A character disappearing, only to resurface years later, having spent some of the intervening years wandering and doing odd jobs
* Parallels drawn between a work of Nathaniel Hawthorne and the plot itself
* Notebooks (also in "Oracle Night")
* A meta-referential ending that places the protagonist as the author of the book itself

In addition, the book also bears the stylistic distinction of not using quotation marks; Auster has previously used this in "Ghosts", the second book of "The New York Trilogy" and "Travels in the Scriptorium".


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