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~~ Free PDF Report from the Interior, by Paul Auster

Free PDF Report from the Interior, by Paul Auster

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Report from the Interior, by Paul Auster

Report from the Interior, by Paul Auster



Report from the Interior, by Paul Auster

Free PDF Report from the Interior, by Paul Auster

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Report from the Interior, by Paul Auster

Paul Auster's most intimate autobiographical work to date

In the beginning, everything was alive. The smallest objects were endowed with beating hearts . . .

Having recalled his life through the story of his physical self in Winter Journal, internationally acclaimed novelist Paul Auster now remembers the experience of his development from within through the encounters of his interior self with the outer world in Report from the Interior.
From his baby's-eye view of the man in the moon, to his childhood worship of the movie cowboy Buster Crabbe, to the composition of his first poem at the age of nine, to his dawning awareness of the injustices of American life, Report from the Interior charts Auster's moral, political, and intellectual journey as he inches his way toward adulthood through the postwar 1950s and into the turbulent 1960s.
Auster evokes the sounds, smells, and tactile sensations that marked his early life—and the many images that came at him, including moving images (he adored cartoons, he was in love with films), until, at its unique climax, the book breaks away from prose into pure imagery: The final section of Report from the Interior recapitulates the first three parts, told in an album of pictures. At once a story of the times—which makes it everyone's story—and the story of the emerging consciousness of a renowned literary artist, this four-part work answers the challenge of autobiography in ways rarely, if ever, seen before.
A Kirkus Reviews Best Nonfiction Book of 2013

  • Sales Rank: #641373 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2013-11-19
  • Released on: 2013-11-19
  • Format: Kindle eBook

From Booklist
Internationally revered novelist Auster follows Winter Journal (2012), his body-centric memoir, with a high-wire explication of his inner life, from his child’s sense that “everything was alive” to “the birth of self-consciousness” to his first writing attempts. Auster’s phenomenal literary powers are generated by his equal fluency in matters emotional and cerebral. Here the origins of that sustaining duality are revealed as he recounts his conscious efforts to “toughen up” and fend for himself as a boy in an unhappy Newark household. Auster nurtured himself with two great obsessions, baseball and books. He intricately chronicles his harsh awakenings to the world’s cruelty, revisits his reading passions, and offers long, enrapturing disquisitions on movies that, for him, were “blows to the head.” A cache of his old letters demolishes his tenuous memories of his student years at Columbia University during the Vietnam War protests and solitary sojourns in Maine and Paris. Closing with an “album” of historic photographs, Auster’s piquant self-portrait as a headstrong boy and “floundering boy-man” maps the “internal geography” of a hungry mind catalyzed and sustained by stories. --Donna Seaman

Review

“Intimate, even claustrophobic, this journey into the author's memory banks reads like a primal scream, an attempt to relive his youth and evolution.” ―Oprah Magazine

“Auster should be recognized as one of the great American prose stylists of our time…. [Auster's] autobiographical works are jewels perfectly cut, luminous little books… It would not be inaccurate to describe the first section, which gives the book its title, as perfect.” ―The New York Times Book Review

“Report from the Interior is a fetchingly original, if eclectic, examination of what it feels like to be a young person in a puzzle-world that still hasn't fallen into place. We all felt it as children; Auster has simply revisited it and put it into words.” ―Richmond Times-Dispatch

“[Report From the Interior] adds another piece to the jigsaw puzzle of one of our greatest writers.... There are wonderful Austerian twists and ruminations here, making for a satisfying addition to his eclectic canon. ” ―Shelf Awareness

“[Auster is an] achingly talented essayist.” ―Denver Post

“Celebrated author Auster (Sunset Park) observes his own life in this engaging memoir… Auster presents a fascinating take on the memoir. Students and fans will appreciate his original examination of his interior self.” ―Library Journal (Starred)

“A high-wire explication of his inner life… Auster's phenomenal literary powers are generated by his equal fluency in matters emotional and cerebral. Here the origins of that sustaining duality are revealed. ” ―Donna Seaman, Booklist

“The interplay of memory, identity and the creative imagination informs this portrait of the artist as a young man, a memoir that the novelist's avid readership will find particularly compelling…. Auster has long rendered life as something of a puzzle; here are some significant, illuminating pieces.” ―Kirkus

About the Author
Paul Auster is the bestselling author of "Winter Journal," "Sunset Park," "Invisible," "The Book of Illusions," and "The New York Trilogy," among many other works. He has been awarded the Prince of Asturias Prize for Literature, the Prix Medicis Etranger, the Independent Spirit Award, and the Premio Napoli. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a Commandeur de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.

Most helpful customer reviews

23 of 26 people found the following review helpful.
Too Much Filler
By L. Young
Paul Auster has admitted in interviews that in the past few years he has found it harder and harder to come up with ideas for novels. So given this lack of ideas for fiction he seems to be churning out non-fiction of late, 'Winter Journal' in August 2012 and just 9 months ago 'Here and Now', a collection of his not very interesting correspondence with novelist J.M. Coetzee. Now we have 'Report from the Interior'. Where in 'Winter Journal' he examined his life through his physical self, he here examines his life through his interior life - his memories. For the most part I found the results lackluster. The first section of the book about his childhood, spent in middle class, suburban New Jersey is filled with memories of school, summer camp, school dances and girls, not any different from the memories of other suburban boys. Nothing makes this material rise about the ordinary, although there are occasional flashes of humor as when a family friend arrives with baseball legend Whitey Ford in tow to introduce to the young, baseball loving Auster. Is it Whitey or an imposter? Fifty years later he still doesn't know.There is an occasional flash of brillance when early in the book he describes his experience as a youngster floating outside himself, 'a phantom without weight', a dissassociatve feeling that still comes back to haunt him so many years later. But such instances are few and far between here.

The third section of the book is relatively interesting. While writing this book his first wife author, Lydia Davis, offered to provide him with copies of his correspondence to her, written while in their twenties. He focuses here on the earliest ones written to her between the ages of 19-22. These letters tell of his time at Columbia University and then in Paris doing some translation work, and his agonizing over whether to complete his junior year abroad or drop out of Columbia making him eligible for the draft during the Vietnam War. In these letters we catch glimpses of the superb writer that Auster will become. Unfortunately this section which ends the book ends with a lengthly letter to Davis describing apartment hunting in NYC, drunkenness and carousing - a touch of the juvenile. To me it was mere filler which is the main problem with this book. To be honest this book is chock full of filler. In the second section of the book Auster spends seventy pages describing in excruciating detail the plots of two films that impacted his childhood - 'The Incredible Shrinking Man' and 'I am a Fugitve from a Chain Gang'. It's easy to understand the emotional impact of these films on a young boy, but I can't explain his need to fill so many pages on them, far more pages then he gives to any books that may have influenced him as a child, which are barely mentioned at all.

Then there is the final section of filler entitled 'Album', grainy black and white photos that illustrate his text - photos from the two movies, as well as news events, and baseball and entertainment figures mentioned in the text, all unneccessary and added to fatten the otherwise slim content of this book. All in all I found it disappointing.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
One Writer's Beginnings
By Foster Corbin
While all of REPORT FROM THE INTERIOR is interesting, the first section is in a word simply brilliant as Paul Auster remembers the first years of his life. (The section ends with an event that happened when the writer was in seventh grade and he was born in 1947.) The opening paragraph is stunning and one I reread again and again: "In the beginning, everything was alive. The smallest objects were endowed with beating hearts and even the clouds had names. Scissors could walk, telephones and teapots were first cousins, eyes and eyeglasses were brothers. . . The branches of trees were arms. Stones could think, and God was everywhere."

To those of us of his generation, Mr. Auster brings that time vividly back to our remembrance: the polio scare, the unsuccessful campaign of Stevenson for President in 1952, Hopalong Cassidy, the Long Ranger and Tonto, "The Twilight Zone" and literally dozens of other references to what was happening in the U. S. Mr. Auster cannot remember learning how to read. "At some point in your adolescence, your mother told you that you could identify the letters of the alphabet by the time you were three or four." He isn't sure this is a true statement since his mother "tended to exaggerate" about the accomplishments of her son. (Sound familiar?) At any rate Mr. Auster fell in love with reading and books,-- although he says there were few books in his home-- purchasing the Modern Library edition of Poe's complete poems and stories when he was only nine-- he didn't understand all that he was reading but loved the sounds of the words -- and later becoming enamored with O. Henry and purchasing in 1958 DOCTOR ZHIVAGO, another book way too difficult for an eleven year old to understand.

Mr. Auster of course was taught by his teachers that "no country could compare to the paradise you lived in" and that every boy [no girl certainly] could grow up to dream of becoming president; but nothing was said about the plight of poor black people or the Indians. He also learned that his father had worked briefly for Thomas Edison, one of Mr. Auster's heroes, and had lost the job only because he was Jewish as Edison was rabidly Anti-Semitic. The writer is not sure exactly when he understood he was a Jew, but it probably came sometime after he realized he was an American. "By the time you were seven or eight, you were beginning to catch on. Jews were invisible, they had no part to play in American life, and they never appeared as heroes in books or films or television shows."

This book would have been incredible if it consisted of only the first section. But we have more although nothing in the rest of the book is quite as good as this part. In the second section "Two Blows to the Head" Mr. Auster remembers two films from his youth that left indelible impressions on him: "The Incredible Shrinking Man" and "I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang." The third section "Tim Capsule" consists of letters he wrote to his first wife Lydia Davis when he was a first young man while a student at Columbia, living both in New York and Paris. We get inside the head of a young man in love who is against the war in Vietnam and anxious about being called up for the draft. Finally he writes to Ms. Davis of his early attempts at becoming a writer.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
original approach to an autobiography from a writer who excels in fiction
By AIROLF
It occurs to me that I should state that I read almost every book Paul Auster ever written. In fact, I first stumbled on him as a writer when I picked up a copy of "Timbuktu" browsing through library stacks in college. "Timbuktu" was the book I had planned to write post graduation, only Auster had better plot, writing, and execution.

I proceeded to read every book he wrote up until "Timbuktu". I kept revising Auster's characters, some of whom stayed with me (particularly, the protagonist of "In The Country of Last Things").

I remember reading in an interview with Auster when he stated that the characters take over him brain and make him tell their stories. When he sits down to write he doesn't know what will happen, he just lets his characters develop and progress.

Auster is one of the best contemporary novelists today, but in recent years his work has turned even more autobiographical than before. It was one thing to write novels that had elements of his life, It's all-together different to write an autobiography.

For that is what Auster does in his latest book, "Report from the Interior." In his latest book, Auster continues to explore themes that are important to him - his childhood, his loves, his relationship with his parents. Auster has always been huge on self-identity and self-exploration. In this novel, he looks upon himself in the second-person. The book ends with intimate letters to the woman who would become his first wife.

This is probably the most original viewpoint one can give his readers in an autobiography. The "you do this, you feel this," draws the reader in. There is a lot of buy-in; a reader must determine fairly quickly whether he is willing to put the time investment to read it.

Out of the previous ten Auster novels I read, each took me hours, several days at the most, to read. "Report from the Interior" took me weeks. Why the discrepancy? Although it is a unique approach to retelling your story, the second-person usage is often cumbersome to read.

Because I judge books by how engaging they are, I can't give this book its full five stars.

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