The story follows , a writer of pulp detective fiction who lives under the pseudonym William Wilson. After receiving a series of mysterious phone calls intended for a "Paul Auster" of the "Auster Detective Agency," Quinn decides to assume this fake identity. He is hired by Peter Stillman Jr. , a man traumatized by an abusive father who kept him locked in a room for years to "rediscover" the language of God. As Quinn follows the elder Stillman through New York City, his own identity begins to dissolve into a labyrinthine obsession that mirrors the city itself. Visual Style and Artistic Innovations
The graphic novel adaptation of City of Glass , created by Paul Karasik and David Mazzucchelli (1994), is a landmark work in comic book history, frequently cited as one of the most important graphic novels of the 20th century. Unlike standard adaptations, it serves as a "visual translation" that uses the unique properties of the comics medium to deepen the novella’s postmodern themes of identity, language, and the collapse of reality. Narrative Summary City of Glass: Graphic Novel
Karasik and Mazzucchelli utilized several groundbreaking visual techniques to adapt Auster's abstract prose: graphic novel – You're the Teacher - UBC Blogs The story follows , a writer of pulp