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Man In The Dark»rank: 3292par: Paul Auster
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Double Game»rank: 45468par: Paul Auster
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In The Country Of Last Things»rank: 48403par: Paul Auster
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Travels In The Scriptorium»rank: 78978par: Paul Auster
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Music Of Chance»rank: 75539par: Paul Auster
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New York Trilogy»rank: 63728par: Paul Auster
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Samuel Beckett, Volume 3: Dramatic Works»rank: 27908par: Samuel Beckett
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Hunger»rank: 61368par: Knut Hamsun
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Samuel Beckett: Novels»rank: 28162par: Samuel Beckett
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Timbuktu»rank: 61124par: Paul Auster
Chroniques et points de vue:From :ln Timbuktu 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 King, 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, Timbuktu 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 ... |
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