MINEFIELD OF SPOILERS ahead. Proceed at your own risk.
To recap the previous post on this novel (July 7, 2024): 4 3 2 1 is quite different from Auster's other novels due to its length (866 pages), its longer, catalog-like sentences (Auster, usually a "less-is-more" kind of writer, gets very expansive here), and its drawing deeply on his own own childhood, boyhood, and youth, up to about age 23 (the point his memoir Hand to Mouth begins).
The novel's main character, Archie Ferguson, maps quite closely on to Auster himself. Born March 3, 1947 (a month later than Auster himself) to a (not very observant) Jewish family, he grows up mainly in a the northern New Jersey suburbs, with frequent forays to New York City. His keenest interests are literature, film, sports, and girls, the priority among which is always in motion.
There is a twist, though. The novel is about not one, but four Archie Fergusons. They all start out on the same day, born to the same family in the same place. But then things begin to diverge. One Archie's father dies while he is still a boy, becoming the victim of insurance-scam arson when he works late one night. Another Archie's parents divorce, the father becoming wealthy while the mother struggles. Another Archie's parents stay married, but the father has given up, resigned himself to failure.
One Archie loses fingers in an auto accident. One dies in adolescence. One is bi-sexual. One Archie's first serious girlfriend is another Archie's stepsister. One ends up going to Princeton, another (like Auster) goes to Columbia, while yet another skips college to make a go at being a writer in Paris.
Archie 2, when still a child, has a moment of insight that establishes the key to the novel. A boy in the neighborhood dares Archie to climb a tree; Archie does, then falls and breaks a leg. He muses on how the whole episode could have gone down differently, a train of thought that leads to surprising conclusions:
If his parents had moved to one of the other towns where they had been looking for the right house, he wouldn't even know Chuckie Brower, wouldn't even know that Chuckie Brower existed, and it wouldn't have been stupid, for the tree he had climbed wouldn't have been in his backyard. Such an interesting thought, Ferguson said to himself: to imagine how things could have been different for himself even though he was the same. The same boy in a different house with a different tree. The same boy with different parents. The same boy with the same parents who didn't do the same things they did now.
The whole development of the novel lies in these alternative scenarios. What if X had happened, rather than Y? If this person had moved away, if that person had stayed? The forking paths proliferate as the novel proceeds, one consequence being that the Archies become very, very differentiated, going from being nearly indistinguishable in the early chapters to being quite different people by the end.
And a thought-provoking idea emerges, for 4 3 2 1 is not just one of those now-familiar plural-universe stories, but a kind of unfolding demonstration of the role chance plays in our lives.
When Auster was a boy at camp, as he has mentioned in interviews, he was nearly killed by a bolt of lightning. The lightning killed a boy standing near him, and Auster was untouched, but it stuck with him that the lightning might just as easily have killed him. It was just a matter of chance. Reflection on the role of chance is everywhere in Auster's work; besides The Red Notebook and The Music of Chance, think of all the plot turns in his novels that depend on some event that could just as easily have flipped differently. And we all have stories like that, don't we? Roads not taken, snowy woods left unexplored?
This feels profound to me. In my part of the world, there is deep reluctance to grant that chance has any important role in our lives. This reluctance is audible in a bundle of expressions we hear all the time: e.g., God Has a Plan for Your Life, It Was Meant to Be, It Had to Happen, There Are No Accidents. Not to mention the variants in which whatever happens to you is your own doing, the precise consequence of your own decisions and actions.
In 4 3 2 1, we are in another kind of cosmos. No God, no plan for your life, no destiny...mainly accidents, which you will have to navigate as best you can, with absolutely no guarantees that virtue or hard work or talent will be rewarded. Scary but heady.
And then, in the final pages, the snake eats its tail.
Glad I lived long enough to get around to reading this.