In Memoriam: American Modernisms Lost Boy-King

Published: May 3, 2024, 5:50 p.m.

We were saddened to learn of Paul Auster\u2019s passing on April 30, at the age of 77. In his memory, revisit this interview, which originally ran on November 5, 2021, on the late author\u2019s favorite writer: Stephen Crane. Exploding the Canon will return next week.


In his decades-long career, the writer Paul Auster has turned his hand to poems, essays, plays, novels, translations, screenplays, memoirs\u2014and now biography. Burning Boy explores the life and work of Stephen Crane, whose short time on earth sputtered out at age 28 from tuberculosis. Like his biographer, Crane, too, spanned genres\u2014poetry, novels, short stories, war reporting, and semi-fictional newspaper \u201csketches\u201d\u2014striking it big in 1895 with The Red Badge of Courage, which was widely celebrated at the time and is still regarded as his best work. But in Auster\u2019s estimation, the rest of Crane\u2019s output (and there is a surprising amount of it) is sorely neglected, and the pleasure of Burning Boy lies in reading one of the 19th century\u2019s finest writers alongside one of today\u2019s. Paul Auster joins the podcast to talk about the task of restoring Stephen Crane to the American canon.


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Hosted by Stephanie Bastek. Theme music by Nathan Prillaman. Have suggestions for projects you\u2019d like us to catch up on, or writers you want to hear from? Send us a note: podcast [at] theamericanscholar [dot] org. And rate us wherever you listen!



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