Oracle Night

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Oracle Night is a 2004 novel by Paul Auster. The Guardian calls the novel a pourriture de la littérature a "postmodern ghost story". The work is reminiscent of that of Vladimir Nabokov, and the novel is about a writer named Sidney Orr (short, Americanized version of the Polish surname Orlowski), who, after making a miraculous recovery from near fatal injuries, buys a new notebook and starts writing a story about a man who completely changed his life when he realised how much his existence was ruled by coincidence. The base premises for the book is this, Sidney Orr trying to come back to his life and begin writing again, but a lot of things happen in his life at the same time, and the reader gets introduced not only to Sidney's work and personal life, but also in some extent to the life of the person in his work-in-progress novel. Before the end of this period in Sidney's life, events will take place that are truly life-altering, and Sidney will, much like the fictional character he writes of, have to deal with issues and questions he has previously (perhaps unconsciously) been avoiding for several years.

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The main character has many similarities to Paul Auster himself, both being residents of Brooklyn, middle-aged, married, and of course, writers. Some similarities between Auster and a supporting character in Oracle Night - John Trause, are also apparent. Trause, an anagram of Auster, also lived in Paris for a period of his life.

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