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    <name><![CDATA[Alex]]></name>
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  <id type="integer">451</id>
  <isbn>0571210708</isbn>
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    <![CDATA[True Tales of American Life]]>
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    <![CDATA[<em>True Tales of American Life</em> is a collection derived from a project launched by Paul Auster on US National Public Radio. Auster credits his wife with the idea of having listeners send in their own short pieces of true-life writing, from which Auster would choose half a dozen to be read on air each week. But, for all the success of the radio programme, as Auster writes, &quot;you can't hold the words in your hands&quot;. Here, then, is the fully &quot;holdable&quot; book. Auster has selected 179 pieces from the 4,000 plus he had received by October 2000. Split fairly evenly between male and female authors, with an age range of 20 to &quot;pushing 90&quot;, the collection revels in its multifariousness: the contributors include &quot;a postman, a merchant seaman, a trolley-bus driver, a gas-and-electric-meter reader, a restorer of player pianos, a crime-scene cleaner&quot;, and so on. The biographical detail is relevant because inevitably most of these true stories draw on the rawest of raw materials, the writers' own experience. <p> Auster wanted &quot;true stories that sounded like fiction&quot;. In an age where talk shows (think <em>Jerry Springer</em> and <em>Ricki Lake</em>) demand that we tell our life stories as fiction--and encourage us to live our lives as fiction--it's a particularly timely and potent meeting place of reality and art, or in Auster's words, &quot;an archive of facts, a museum of American reality&quot; in fictional form. Unlike Auster, who regularly has to wade through 60 of these tales in a day to meet his weekly radio deadlines, the regular reader can dip in and out. And at a rate of, say, one story per day, this book will keep you fascinated with (and occasionally horrified at) American's true life tales for just about six months. --<em>Alan Stewart</em> </p>]]>
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        <name><![CDATA[Paul Auster]]></name>
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  </authors>  <published>2001</published>
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  <date_added>Sun Jan 27 16:10:42 -0800 2008</date_added>
  <date_updated>Sun Jan 27 16:10:42 -0800 2008</date_updated>
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