Wide-ranging correspondence between celebrated authors grew from Coetzee's suggestion they 'strike sparks off each other'
An exchange of letters
between JM
Coetzee and Paul Auster, delving into
everything from fatherhood to philosophy, will be published next summer.
The two acclaimed authors
– the
South African Coetzee won the Nobel prize in 2003, while Auster has been
inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters – had been fans of each
other's writing for years, but only met for the first time in February 2008.
Shortly afterwards, Coetzee wrote to Auster, suggesting they begin a regular
correspondence, and, "God willing, strike sparks off each other."
Out next May, Here and Now is a record of an "epistolatory dialogue between two great writers who became great friends", according to publisher Faber. Covering three years of letter writing, the authors – Auster living in Brooklyn, New York, and Coetzee in Australia – cover topics including sports, film festivals, incest, politics, the financial crisis, family, art, marriage, friendship and love. "Their correspondence offers an intimate and often amusing portrait of these two men as they explore the complexities of the here and now and is a reflection of two sharp intellects whose pleasure in each other's friendship is apparent on every page," said Faber.
Here and Now follows last
year's well-received publication of a letter exchange between the French
novelist Michel Houellebecq
and the French philosopher Bernard-Henri
Lévy. "Everything separates us from one another, with the exception of one
fundamental point: we're both utterly despicable individuals," wrote Houellebecq
to Lévy. Tim Adams in the Observer called it a "strangely
compulsive, wildly self-absorbed exchange" and "an exceptional, and
enjoyable" addition to the French "tradition of memorable after-dinner
conversation". He added that it was "hard to imagine a British equivalent – who
would we end up with? Irvine Welsh and Alain de Botton?"
Julian Loose, non-fiction
publisher at Faber, said the Auster/Coetzee correspondence was "a wonderful
testament" to the authors' friendship. "Sharing this rich exchange of thoughts
and memories and opinions between Paul Auster and JM Coetzee – two great
writers at the height of their powers - is an extraordinary and intimate
experience for the reader, and Faber and Harvill Secker have come together in
something of the same collaborative spirit to publish [it]," he said.
From the New
York Trilogy to Man
in the Dark, Auster's award-winning writing has been translated into more
than 30 languages. Coetzee has won the Booker prize twice – the first author
ever to do so – for the novels The
Life and Times of Michael K, and Disgrace.
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