Paul Auster 4321 Epub Indir5/6/2021
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![]() To Add to Wish List, choose from options to the left classa-button-input a-declarative typesubmit valueAdd to Wish List aria-labelledbywishListMainButton-announce. FT SHORTLISTED FOR THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE 2017 On March 3rd, 1947, Archibald Isaac Ferguson, the only child of Rose and Stanley Ferguson, is born. From that single beginning, Fergusons life will take four simultaneous but entirely different paths. Each version of Fergusons story rushes across the fractured terrain of mid-twentieth century America, in this sweeping story of birthright and possibility, of love and the fullness of life itself. New York Times A vast portrait of the turbulent mid-20th century... In order to navigate out of this carousel please use your heading shortcut key to navigate to the next or previous heading. Tom Perrotta, The New York Times Book Review A stunningly ambitious novel, and a pleasure to read. Austers writing is joyful even in the booksdarkest moments, and never ponderous or showy.... An incredibly moving, true journey. NPR Ingenious.... ![]() Esquire Mesmerizing... Continues to push the narrative envelope.... Four distinct characters whose lives diverge and intersect in devious, rollicking ways, reminiscent of Kate Atkinsons Life After Life.... Prismatic and rich in period detail, 4 3 2 1 reflects the high spirits of postwar America as well as the despair coiled, asplike, in its shadows. O, the Oprah Magazine Sharply observed.... Reads like a sprawling, 19th-century novel. The Wall Street Journal Ambitious and sprawling.... Immersive.... Auster has a startling ability to report the world in novel ways. USA Today The power of Austers best work is... The Invention of Solitude, to explore the infinite possibilities of a limited space.... The effect of 4 3 2 1 is almost cubist in its multidimensionality that of a single, exceptionally variegated life displayed in the round.... An impressively ambitious novel. Harpers Magazine Austers magnificent new novel is reminiscent of Invisible in that it deals with the impossibility of containing a lifein a single story.... Undeniably intriguing.... A mesmerizing chronicle of one characters four lives... The finestthough one hopes, farfrom finalact in one of the mightiest writing careers of the last half century. Paste Magazine Wonderfully clever.... It is a heartfeltand engaging piece of storytelling that unflinchingly explores the 20thcentury American experience in all its honor and ignominy. This is, withoutdoubt, Austers magnum opus.... A true revelation... One cant help but admit they are in the presence of a genius. Toronto Star A multitiered examination of the implications of fate... A signifier of both possibility and its limitations. The Washington Post At the heart of this novel is a provocative question: What would have happened if your life hadtaken a different turn at a critical moment... Ingenious. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Auster presents four lovingly detailed portrayals ofthe intensity of youth of awkwardness and frustration, but also of passion forbooks, films, sport, politics and sex.... ![]() What he is driving at is not only the role of contingency and the unexpected, but the what-ifs that haunt us, the imaginary lives we hold in our minds that run parallel to our actual existence. TIME Magazine Auster pays tribute to what Rose Ferguson thinks of as a dear, dirty, devouring New York, the capital of human faces, the horizontal Babel of human tongues... Sprawling... occasionally splendid. The New Yorker A bona fide epic... Minneapolis Star Tribune Inventive, engrossing. St. Louis Post-Dispatch Arresting... A hugely accomplished work, a novel unlike any other.
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