Book Review

Timbuktu

This cloying tale narrated by a dog named Mr. Bones should annoy Paul Auster's fans even more than his last book, the skimpy memoir Hand to Mouth. Flashes of Auster's delightful eccentricity appear in his depiction of Willy G. Christmas, an itinerant poet on a do-good mission from Santa Claus, whose death leaves loyal, wise Mr. Bones alone to ponder human nature (dogs can understand ''Ingloosh'' but can't speak it) and heaven (Timbuktu). Unfortunately, sophomoric tricks in Timbuktu (Santa=Satan, God=Dog) dilute Auster's verbal electricity, and sentimentality substitutes for the magical fatalism of masterpieces like The Music of Chance. For a writer of Auster's talents, this effort is a mere dog paddle. C

Originally posted May 28, 1999 Published in issue #487 May 28, 1999 Order article reprints

Add your comment

The rules: Keep it clean, and stay on the subject or we might delete your comment. If you see inappropriate language, e-mail us. An asterisk * indicates a required field.

500 characters remaining
Advertisement