Timbuktu
Paul Auster  
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Maison d'édition:Faber and Faber
Pages:192
ISBN:9780571203291
Format:Broché
Édition:New edition
Date de parution:2000-06-05
Date de l'ajout:2012-01-28
Prix:EUR 4,88 EUR
Mots-clés: Social Issues, Genre Fiction, Contemporary, Poche et Broché

Résumé: Amazon.com: In <I>Timbuktu</I> Paul Auster tackles homelessness in America using a dog as his point-of-view character. Strange as the premise seems, it's been done before, in John Berger's <I>King</I>, and it actually works. Filtering the homeless experience through the relentlessly unsentimental eye of a dog, both writers avoid miring their tales in an excess of melodrama. Whereas Berger's book skips among several characters, <I>Timbuktu</I> remains tightly focused on just two: Mr. Bones, a mutt of no particular worth or distinction, and his master, Willy G. Christmas, a middle-aged schizophrenic who has been on the streets since the death of his mother four years before. The novel begins with Willy and Mr. Bones in Baltimore searching for a former high school English teacher who had encouraged the teenage Willy's writerly aspirations. Now Willy is dying and anxious to find a home for both his dog and the multitude of manuscripts he has stashed in a Greyhound bus terminal. Willy had written the last sentence he would ever write, and there were no more than a few ticks left in the clock. The words in the locker were all he had to show for himself. If the words vanished, it would be as if he had never lived. <p> Paul Auster is a cerebral writer, preferring to get to his reader's gut through the brain. When Willy dies, he goes out on a sea of words; as for Mr. Bones, this is a dog who can think about metaphysical issues such as the afterlife--referred to by Willy as Timbuktu: <blockquote> What if no pets were allowed? It didn't seem possible, and yet Mr. Bones had lived long enough to know that anything was possible, that impossible things happened all the time. Perhaps this was one of them, and in that <I>perhaps</I> hung a thousand dreads and agonies, an unthinkable horror that gripped him every time he thought about it. </blockquote> Once Willy dies and Mr. Bones is on his own, things go from bad to worse as the now masterless dog faces a series of betrayals, rejections, and disappointments. By stepping inside a dog's skin, Auster is able to comment on human cruelties and infrequent kindnesses from a unique world view. But reader be warned: the world in <I>Timbuktu</I> is a bleak one, and even the occasional moments of grace are short lived. <I>--Alix Wilber</I><br /><br /><a href=http://www.amazon.fr/Timbuktu-Paul-Auster/dp/0571203299?SubscriptionId=1W087CHNYGBWE51SK6R2&tag=ws&linkCode=xm2&camp=2025&creative=165953&creativeASIN=0571203299>Amazon</a>