4 3 2 1 and The New York Trilogy,
an updated collection of Paul Auster's nonfiction, including the seminal work The Invention of Solitude. Paul Auster spent his fifty-year writing career examining what it means to be truly alive. And in
Groundwork, a self-curated collection, Auster stitches together various autobiographical writings to lay bare the trajectory of both his personal life and sense of self.
From his breakout memoir,
The Invention of Solitude, which solidified Auster's reputation as a canonical voice in American letters, to excerpts from his later memoirs,
Winter Journal and
Report from the Interior, readers are ushered into the inner workings of Auster's self-development. His sweeping recollection winds through the halls of Columbia University during the turbulent 1960s and into life as a young poet-turned-novelist, then dives headfirst into the realities that accompany aging today. Along the way, Auster continually challenges the notion of what autobiography can be, inverting the form through fragmentation and, ultimately, illustrating firsthand the brilliance behind "one of the great writers of our time" (
San Francisco Chronicle).