4 3 2 1 by Paul Auster, 866 pages.
One of my absolute favorites from 2017, I read this one a second time for SB2017 earlier this year. The audio, with Auster narrating, is excellent as well.
Here is what I said last year:
A phenomenal book, really one of my all-time favorites. Strongly recommended for fans of Kate Atkinson's Life after Life (and, of course, A God in Ruins), David Mitchell's The Cloud Atlas, and other literary works with a speculative edge.
this extraordinary novel opens with a joke a that tells how the main
character's grandfather, Isaac Reznikoff became Ichabod Ferguson. The
joke is repeated near the end of the book, and this framing, and it's
accompanying explanation somehow tie together the four different lives
of Archie Ferguson. The novel presents four different lives for Archie,
four different paths that his life could take based on different
decisions made when Archie was still young. Each chapter has four
versions, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, then 2.1, etc. (chapter 1 actually has a
1.0, too, before the split)
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