The Year of Reading Proust discussion

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Marcel Proust
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Don't worry, Mike. I read all seven volumes but am now working on the review you just finished. I have not been in a reviewing mood this year but am starting to feel enthusiasm about analyzing what I've read again. I'm reviewing the second volume for the second review.

I share your view of this vol.

I liked your analysis it is to the point as to what a futile life these people led.Sometimes it felt like a "Hello" magazine article.
The Guermantes/guerre comaprison induced me to go further into a French/English mix, *guerreman*. I wonder if M.P. new English. World war was round the bend when he wrote ISOLT and these people´s lives were going to be totally altered.

Thank you Aubrey.I really enjoyed your review on TGW.At times it felt like you were describing some groups one can meeet if not careful nowadays.

as i was writing my reply to your review i had this terrible compulsion to clean my keyboard and it all went away.So now i will try and repeat my masterpiece:
I really enjoyed your review because i have just finished reading The Hare With The Amber Eyes (excellent) and you review depicts the characters in that book to the T (?).They didn´t end very well with WWI,poor guys.
BTW I love your new avatar Cleopatra! Gorgeous! but best of all i like the picture with the quotation saying how when you finish a book you suddenly go ,"What is all this going around?life?what?how?"I read The Hare... and The Son by Philipp Meyer also excellent -a Texan 100 Years of Solitude- I don´t expect much more this year.There aren´t so many good books.
In my profile i put the books that really changed something in me not the one i´ve read.I see tht some have put something like 37896 & 1/4 books!

as i was writing my reply to your review i had this terrible compulsion to clean my keyboard and it all went away.So now i will try and repeat my masterpiece:
I really enjoyed your review..."
Patricia,
I think you are right in only putting the books worth listing.

as i was writing my reply to your review i had this terrible compulsion to clean my keyboard and it all went away.So now i will try and repeat my masterpiece:
I really enjoyed your review..."
Thank you Patricia! My avatar is not that of Cleopatra. I call her Palestinian Barbie. I wanted to show off my Palestinian heritage and my love for our beautiful embroidery. Iam going to have to read The Hare With The Amber Eyes after learning that you thought it was excellent!



I am glad this poor guy is out of his bedroom,his asthma,all those accarus/accarii (?)in between all those covers and heavy curtains and tapestries..."
A friend of mine says that all of you are Neruda and I am Il Postino!!!
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0110877/?...

"
Ha Ha Ha, Patricia!
Your comment mentioning Neruda brought back memories of visiting his home, la Chascona, in Santiago, Chile.

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

"
Ha Ha Ha, Patricia!
Your comment mentioning Neruda brought back memories of visiting his home, la Chasc..."
Beautiful isn´t it?


Thank you, Patricia. You are obviously aware of the ambiguities of the word "baiser" for one thing; as a noun, it is a kiss, but as a verb.... And you have noticed that the narrator has some serious character flaws. No wonder sloth was considered one of the seven deadly sins!

Thank you, Patricia. You are obviously aware of the ambiguities of the word "baiser" for one thing; as a noun, it is a kiss, but as a verb.... And you have noticed that the narrator has some serious character flaws. No wonder sloth was considered one of the seven deadly sins!

1. Swann's Way: Davis Translation
2. In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flower: Grieve Translation
3. The Guermantes Way: Treharne Translation
4. Sodom and Gommorah: Sturrock Translation
5. the Captive: Moncrieff Translation
6. the Fugative: Moncrieff Translation
7. Time Regained
And my review of the entire novel:
In Search of Lost Time

This is part of an ongoing series of interviews about the art of criticism.
http://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/mag...

I therefore decided to post this goofy video in which I indulged my zany self. It is titled "How Proust can improve your life."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rxDy9X...

Horrors! Blocked on my iPad.

Jocelyne, this is brilliant....

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Also Jocelyne: that's absolutely hilarious and perfect. I have to ask, does the Proust yoga come with an inhaler in case our author wants to try?

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
https://www.goodreads.com/review/sh..."
LOL! Maybe if our author had taken some long, slow, nourishing breaths and held asanas while writing ISOLT, he would not have suffered from asthma.

Jocelyne, this is fabulous...and so wonderfully funny! Your muse was firing and crackling with pure genius.

Jocelyne - you are Absolutely Fabulous!


Frankly no. I read it as an extremely rich depiction of a life well lived! He saw things from so many angles, it was fantastical to his imagination. I don't see him as a victim at all. How could he be when he had so much to fall back on?




In all fairness, the narrator is pretty harsh on everyone else around him, too. Albertine gets the brunt of his obsessive tendencies and Swann is always portrayed as this sort of great man brought down by his love for a woman outside of his religion, social class, and level of respectability.
I think you're having trouble differentiating the author from the narrator, even if they do share a first name. I'm sure there's a lot of influence on Proust's personal life on Marcel the narrator's interpretation of the world, but authors can portray characters like themselves in critical or unflattering light (i.e. Phillip Roth and Irene Nemirovsky).

Despite what your critics say, Deborah, I think you are really on to something here. It may be very obvious too. Which is why many would disregard it.
But How many writers can be totally disengaged from their work ,especially this one..his Magnus Opus , the compilation of his Life and experiences.
I think it is very likely Proust could have taken this attiude to himself...especially in those days. Even today I know gay men who live such lives.A life of lies and mostly the Lies are largely to themselves even when they are lying ,on the surface , to others.
Well done...from Gay Wayne !!!
My feeling, reading slowly, now five months into the novel, and just into The Captive, is that Proust's way of looking at (and commenting on) Charlus, and all other characters, is quite dispassionate; Marcel serves as his narrator, but there are many points at which the reader's attention is drawn directly to a wider, and often balanced, view of the characters' lives and behaviours that I sense an authorial voice alerting us to a distance Proust wishes to draw between himself and his putative narrator.
In fact, the experience of living with these characters through such extended periods of time in my "real" life, only brings me to a sympathetic view of them all, for I see how well Proust draws attention to the kind of sometimes honourable, sometimes dubious motivations that I am brought to recognise in myself.
In fact, the experience of living with these characters through such extended periods of time in my "real" life, only brings me to a sympathetic view of them all, for I see how well Proust draws attention to the kind of sometimes honourable, sometimes dubious motivations that I am brought to recognise in myself.
Books mentioned in this topic
Time Regained (other topics)Time Regained (other topics)
The Captive / The Fugitive (other topics)
A l'ombre des jeunes filles en fleurs (other topics)
The Guermantes Way (other topics)
More...
I am glad this poor guy is out of his bedroom,his asthma,all those accarus/accarii (?)in between all those covers and heavy curtains and tapestries and rugs -withou..."
Patricia...I just now started perusing these postings. You have me laughing heartily. As Reem said so eloquently, you wrote the Monty Python review...straight from your heart and with truth. Thank you...you are delightful!