Local Colour by derek beaulieu is a pageâÂÂbyâÂÂpage interpretation of Paul AusterâÂÂs 72âÂÂpage novella Ghosts. Ghosts concerns itself with Blue, a private detective hired by a mysterious character named White to transcribe the actions of Black, a denizen of Brooklyn Heights. As Blue reports his findings, the reader becomes more aware of the intricate relationship between Black and White, and a tactile awareness of colour spreads through the narrative. With Local Colour, beaulieu has removed the entirety of AusterâÂÂs text, leaving only chromatic wordsâÂÂproper nouns or notâÂÂspread across the page as dollops of paint on a palette. What remains is the written equivalent of ambient musicâÂÂwords which are meant to be seen but not read. The colours, through repetition, build a suspense and crescendo which is loosened from traditional narrative into a more pointillist construction. beaulieuâÂÂs writing is a record of reading, a trace of absence. A writing without writing – & available as per today from ntamo.
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