Auster, Paul

Jan 19
2008

Auster, Paul
What is a good/short Paul Auster book I can read?

Normally I don’t read fiction and very short on time so what is a good introductory read? A friend highly recommended him so I’ll give Paul a try. Thanks.

Leviathan, as the name implies, is big. Perhaps his best work, but big (for him). My first Auster novel was Moon Palace and I needed to keep reading him after that. Try that, or the New York Stories, which are three short stories – you can bail after the first, but most do not.


Sophie Auster


Sophie Auster


$12.04


This album is a collaboration between the 16-year-old Sophie Auster and the One Ring Zero musicians Michael Hearst and Joshua Camp. The lyrics of the songs were written by Sophie herself, by Paul Auster, by some of the great French poets of the twentieth century, and by an anonymous Englishman who lived over five hundred years ago. The first recording session took place in October 2003; the last i…

Codex Las Huelgas: Music From 13th Century Spain


Codex Las Huelgas: Music From 13th Century Spain


$9.64


Just how engaging, catchy, lively, and artful can 13th century Spanish music be? Very, as evidenced by this collection of motets, conductus, mass movements, and strophic songs from the legendary manuscript compiled at the 12th-century Cistercian convent at Las Huelgas. This remarkable program, highlighting only a handful of the nearly 200 works contained in the original manuscript, shows not o…

Michael Mantler / Paul Auster: Hide And Seek


Michael Mantler / Paul Auster: Hide And Seek


$9.49



Center of the World [VHS]


Center of the World [VHS]


$4.99


The titular center of the world is a matter of perspective in Wayne Wang’s (The Joy Luck Club, Smoke) notorious, explicit drama of emotional isolation and sexual commerce in the modern world. According to rich, apathetic cyber-geek Peter Sarsgaard (Boys Don’t Cry), it’s his home computer. Amateur rock & roll drummer and part-time stripper Molly Parker (Wonderland) deems it an erotic part of t…

Music of Chance [VHS]


Music of Chance [VHS]


$19.98



Smoke [VHS]


Smoke [VHS]


$9.49


It’s refreshing to see a film in which the writer receives equal credit with the director, showing that the dialogue actually means something. So it is with Smoke, a film about a New York quilt of contemporary characters who cross paths in a corner smoke shop, told in straightforward way by a talented acting group. Author Paul Auster and director Wayne Wang (The Joy Luck Club) worked on the story …

Smoke


Smoke


$19.98


SMOKE – DVD Movie…

Lulu On The Bridge


Lulu On The Bridge


$7.76


LULU ON THE BRIDGE – DVD Movie…

Smoke


Smoke


$2.99



Paul Auster


Paul Auster




Auster, Daniel (I)

Dec 15
2007

Auster, Daniel (I)

First off, when the bus doesn’t hit you! Secondly, when it does collide with one Daniel Miller, a character in a spiritual movie that is not only motivational but very funny as well.

Albert Brooks plays Daniel Miller, the man hit by a bus. The fatal accident lands him in Judgement City. There he is put on trial to see if he is worthy to advance to the next level or if he must return to earth for another incarnation.

While there he meets and falls for the wonderful Julia (Meryl Streep) who is also on trial. Julia has lived an exemplary life and her good deeds are replayed showcasing her altruism. Brooks character, meanwhile, is subjected to watching his many shortcomings come to life on a big screen video as the lawyers for and against watch and comment.

Rip Torn does a great job as Brooks’ defense lawyer Bob Diamond and Lee Grant plays the prosecutor Lena Foster. But it is Brooks and Streep who carry this film. Brooks is at his best as his usual hyperchondriacish self. And, Streep is very sweet as his love-interest. Streep’s almost saint-like life is bolstered by her humble attitude and makes her all the more attractive. Brooks, on the other hand, in reviewing his less than stellar stint on planet earth is able to make it a memorable one by injecting it with big doses of self-deprecating humor. Witness the following exchange between Brooks and the lawyers:

Bob Diamond: Did we ever stop to think that this young boy had a bond with his father? I don’t think it had anything to do with the friend. I just think Daniel couldn’t lie to his dad. That’s all.

Lena Foster: You’re nodding, Mr. Miller. Does that mean you agree with Mr. Diamond?

Daniel Miller: Oh, yes. I had a bond with my father. I pretty much never lied to him.

Lena Foster: You never lied to your father? Would you like me to show you at least 500 examples?

Daniel Miller: I said “pretty much” never lied. I didn’t say I never, ever lied. You have to lie sometimes… in an emergency. But, ah, it doesn’t mean the bond is affected. If you’ve got the bond the bond is always there, and if you have to lie occasionally you’re not going to interfere with the bond. You know, the bond can wait for a little lie and… in the end it’s there for you. You know, sometimes in the middle of a lie I found that the bond would kick in… maybe squeeze a little truth out.

Bob Diamond: Psst, wrap it up.

Daniel Miller: I’m through.

Through, indeed…

As this motivational movie progresses and the relationship develops between Streeps and Brooks, the question becomes – will they be through? Will they get to stay together or will they be sent to different places following their life reviews and possibly never be together again.

It is interesting to see what criteria Brooks is ultimately judged on in his quest for salvation. For a spiritual journey with a lot of laughs and to find the answer to his salvation watch Defending Your Life.

What is spiritual about this movie? I like the notion that redemption is just around the corner if you are only willing to take a chance at it – in the case of this movie that payoff comes at the very end – a lesson well-learned by Brooks’ character. There is also the uncommon spiritual notion that life doesn’t have to be some solemn austere enterprise but should be for the living. To that end, Brooks is given kudos for upgrading his ticket on a long flight to first class – pampering himself in essense at the expense of expense!

Essentially, life is for the living, so live it – cause, hey, like Daniel Miller, you could get hit by a bus tomorrow. Along the way though you may want to help some folks, do some charity work, and love others cause if you end up landing in Judgement City watching a movie review of your life you’ll want to be able to enjoy it…

Defending Your Life makes getting hit by a bus a pleasurable
experience – provided you’re not the one taking the hit.

About the Author:

Free ebook reviews and lists top motivational movies. This
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Article Source: ArticlesBase.comWhen Can Being Killed by a Bus be a Good Thing?


City of Glass (New York Trilogy)


City of Glass (New York Trilogy)


$7.28


Nominated for an Edgar Award for Best Mystery of the Year, City of Glass inaugurates an intriguing New York Trilogy of novels that The Washington Post Book World has classified as “post-existentialist private eye…It’s as if Kafka has gotten hooked on the gumshoe game and penned his own ever-spiraling version.” As a result of a strange phone call in the middle of the night, Quinn, a writer of det…

Auster, Neil

Oct 23
2007

Auster, Neil

Auster, Pete (I)

Apr 08
2007