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A reader's guide to Remembrance of things past

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It is often observed by those who have read Proust that so powerful are the evocations of place and the recreation of his life experiences, that readers afterwards find it difficult to believe that they are not their own. "Yes - That's exactly how it is!" sums up this sort of reaction, though of course it is his genius to have put it into words in the first place. And for a writer so renowned for prolixity (even longeurs) what is not so frequently observed is the fact that he is much given to placing pithy aphorisms in his text, deeply embedded in huge paragraphs though they might often be. This book should appeal to the intelligent 'Common Reader' who wants to undertake the extended literary journey that a reading of Proust presents. And it will be a reliable guide mainly because it was written by exactly such a person, composed as a homage to a writer he had come to love.

Paperback

Published January 1, 1983

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Terence Kilmartin

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