Sunset Park

Sunset Park

2010 • 309 pages

Ratings15

Average rating3.3

15

Sunset Park follows a small gang of young adults in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis and features many Auster hallmarks. It's largely set in New York City, is full of baseball trivia, and lots of intertextual references. I found Sunset Park to be a mostly okay novel, if a little unfocused. The story changes perspectives frequently, often moving away from the most interesting characters to check in with someone else.

My first big gripe is that the protagonist is a far fetched character if there ever was one. He is excessively gloomy and stubborn, while also being completely magnetic to every other character. I just didn't find him to be at all believable, even in Auster's fantasy land.

Another problem to me was the prevalence of inappropriate relationships between minors and adults. Several different characters had sexual relationships with teenagers that were ultimately justified by the story. Auster acknowledges the weirdness of it, but dismisses it. It feels like he wasn't sure why exactly these relationships are inappropriate.

As other reviews have said, the biggest problem comes at the very end. The ending is extremely abrupt, bleak, and ambiguous. It really soured me on the whole book that came before.

I would give this book a pass. There are some nice moments, but I found it to be the weakest Auster novel I've read.

November 22, 2022Report this review