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22 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Illusionist Does It Again, December 26, 2003
Sidney Orr is just recovering from a near fatal illness, and is thinking about starting back to writing. He stumbles into a little stationery shop owned by a mysterious Chinese, and purchases a unique last-of-its-kind notebook from Portugal. With just such seemingly unrelated details, author Paul Auster lures you into his alternate reality, a world of haunting questions and mysteries. Is there anything more to life than chance? Does anything have meaning? What is the nature of time? And most importantly, can fantasy become reality? Does the writer with his fantastic creations actually bring about future events? Author Auster, who wrote The Book of Illusions, is a master at creating what a psychiatrist would call "dissociation"--the splitting of consciousness. With apparent ease he has the reader following three stories at once--story within story within story--and slipping into something like a trance. He fixates the reader's attention with Chinese stationers and secretive spouses and leads the reader off track with rambling footnotes that go on for several pages. He is extremely skilled at this. I can't tell you much about the plot--you will just have to read it yourself--but I can tell you that you will be--well--entranced. I highly recommend this one! Reviewed by Louis N. Gruber.
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15 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Intriguing; but ultimately disappointing, January 4, 2004
This book caught my attention quickly, and kept me puzzled and, at times, almost, spellbound. There were layers upon layers of coincidence and happenstance, and I felt that ultimately, surely, this would all come together through skillful writerly sleight-of-hand. Such was not, however, the outcome. Countless hints and feints just fade away, never explained, never resolved. The "resolution" was too quick and incomplete; almost a quickie deus-ex-machina formulation, leaving far too many issues hanging, unexplained, irritating, bothering, and making me wonder whether I hadn't wasted my time on this book.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
To live in a blur of accelerated motion, February 1, 2004
I found it hard to categorize this novel. Oracle Night is certainly a beautifully written piece of work, but is it a thriller, a sinister account of the life of a struggling writer, a symbolic treatise on the nature of cause and effect, or a study of a relationship in transition? Maybe it is all of these or any one of them. The novel certainly works well, as a novel within a novel, and the narrative is full of mysterious portents, omens and signs. Symbolism is paramount as Sidney Orr; the main protagonist wonders the streets of Manhattan ruminating on his life, his marriage to his wife Grace, his health, and his talent as a writer. A mysterious notebook bought at a stationery shop in the Cobble Hill section of Brooklyn forms the symbolic core of the novel, as Sidney, recovering from a near fatal illness purchases the book, and for the next nine days lives almost under its spell. Eerie premonitions and a series of bewildering and mystifying events surround him, as he maniacally begins a novel about the life of Nick Bowen, who has inexplicably deserted his wife Eva, and is trying to start a new life for himself in Kansas City. As the story progresses, Sidney is forced to confront certain circumstances in his own life that demand an explanation. Is Sidney like Nick and "in search of indifference, a tranquil affirmation of things-as-they-are" or is he like Eva, "at war with those things, a victim of circumstances" his mind " a storm field of conflicting emotions: panic, and fear, sorrow, anger and despair." As the novel progresses, Nick's journey of self-discovery culminates in the revealing of secrets, and the realization that there is more to his relationship with his wife Grace and with the enigmatic author John Trause than meets the eye. Auster beautifully and cogently weaves so many different themes into the narrative: The connection between imagination and reality, the cause and effect "between the words in a poem and the events in our lives", the nature of time, and the manifestation of bad luck in its "most cruel and perverse form." The acceptance of the power of random, and purely accidental forces that mold our destinies is at the thematic heart of this novel. Oracle Night is an original and quite innovative work of fiction. Michael
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