In Search of Lost Time, Volume VI
β Scribed by Marcel Proust
- Publisher
- Modern Library
- Year
- 1970;2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 421 KB
- Edition
- Modern Library paperback edition
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
From Library Journal
In The Fugitive, the seventh volume of Proust's classic Remembrance of Things Past, the focus is grief. The plot is superficially simple: Albertine, the narrator's mistress, has left him; he considers his love for her, her reasons for departure, what response(s) he should make, and his life. He makes several attempts to manipulate her return; when it becomes impossible, he mourns and remembers the past. This series is a pseudoautobiographical study of the author's own self-centered, physically restricted, self-reflective life in pre-World War I France. In Time Regained, the final volume, Proust gathers together all the themes of the previous seven. The narrator pays several visits to Paris, during and after the war, observing the military and nonmilitary behaviors of old and new acquaintances. Later, he is shocked to recognize that they and he have become old. Finally, his thoughts turn to former events, old loves, and reliving his experiences through writing. The author is known for his complicated thought patterns and recurring, interwoven themes. Unfortunately, both the abridgment and the format compound these textual difficulties. There is likely to be little demand for this abridged French classic in translation, unless it is made into a movie. Neville Jason has a beautiful voice and an obvious love for the text. Recommended for large academic and public libraries. I. Pour-El, Iowa State Univ. Lib., Ames
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
βProust is perhaps the last great historian of the loves.β βEdmund Wilson
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
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'Flower and plant have no conscious will. They are shameless, exposing their genitals. And so in a sense are Proust's men and women ... shameless. There is no question of right and wrong. Homosexuality ... is as devoid of moral implications as the mode of fecundation of the Primula veris or the Lyth
Each volume contains notes, addenda and synopses, and the sixth and final volume also includes a guide to the complete work. From the Trade Paperback edition.
'Flower and plant have no conscious will. They are shameless, exposing their genitals. And so in a sense are Proust's men and women ... shameless. There is no question of right and wrong. Homosexuality ... is as devoid of moral implications as the mode of fecundation of the Primula veris or the Lyth