Reading Proust's In Search of Lost Time in 2014 discussion
Introductions / Other Topics
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Introductions

I picked up Proust’s The Prisoner and the Fugitive because it happened to be lying about; on loan (my partner had borrowed it from a friend but had never actually opened it). I found The Prisoner rather hard going because of Marcel and the quirks of his jealousy (I won’t put in any spoilers). Actually the mention of jealousy reminds me that I heard a TED talk about a month or so ago by Parul Sehgal who suggests that it is fiction, (including Proust’s In Search of Lost Time) rather than science that ‘demystifies’ and ‘domesticates’ this vile but necessary emotion. Jealousy for instance, ‘cracks us open’, and allows us to know what we love and want (a love object can be a person or a book –I’d been jealous of those who could plough through Proust, for instance). It was this TED talk that decided for me it was time to get to grips with my own jealousies, starting with the one about reading Proust…Below is the link to Parul Sehgal’s talk, if anyone is interested.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_x1qku...

But earlier this year, I was reading 1Q84 by Haruki Murakami (another substantially long - but not this ridiculously long - List book) and came across this quote:
“How about Proust's In Search of Lost Time?" Tamaru asked. "If you've never read it this would be a good opportunity to read the whole thing."
"Have you read it?"
"No, I haven't been in jail, or had to hide out for a long time. Someone once said unless you have those kinds of opportunities, you can't read the whole of Proust.”
So, you see, it's like the universe just double-dog dared me.
I'll be reading the $3.99 Barnes & Noble version, but I'm working my way through Alia's posted reading schedule and gathering the corresponding page numbers. (It's quite an undertaking in itself - I'm still only up to April.) Once I get those, I'll send them to her so that she can share with the group. (Surely I'm not the only nook user. LOL!)
Oh, and while I'm on the subject - does anyone think it's hysterical that this book is a "Lend Me" book with B&N? Which means, you can loan it to someone's nook, but only for the allotted two weeks. And then, you can't loan it again. Who is going to read 3,000 pages in two weeks? LOL!
Hi everyone! For me, I've been aware of Proust for about twenty years now but I never seriously considered reading him. I remember seeing the yellow hardback copies racked up on the library shelves together with the massive three volume set and it looked forbidding, scary even. But since then I've tackled some 'big' reading projects, such as Gibbon's 'Decline & Fall' and more recently Zola's Rougon-Macquart series and Ulysses. There have been a few others; some I liked, some I didn't, whilst others bored me to tears - but the important lesson is that these intimidating books CAN be conquered...and even enjoyed!!
So why now? It just feels right I guess. I finished Zola's R.M. in the middle of last year and was really in the mood for more French writers, I noticed the 2013 Proust group and was disappointed that I'd missed that and very nearly started the first volume when I saw this group, so I thought I'd hold fire and start with the rest of the group.
I'm planning to read the Vintage 6 volume set of the Moncrieff/Kilmartin/Enright translation on Kindle as it seemed the best option for me and is easily available here in England. I've got the first two volumes but I may switch translations along the way if I feel that would be better.
I've never actually tried Proust before so I'm excited about diving in. I've literally only read a few random sentences or quotes in other books so I'm not sure what the experience will be like. My main concern is that there will be too many art and literature references that I won't understand - if that's the case I will probably just use my 'Ulysses' approach - which was 'read it slowly, try to take it all in but if you don't understand it then move on to the next sentence'. It seemed to work for me...
So why now? It just feels right I guess. I finished Zola's R.M. in the middle of last year and was really in the mood for more French writers, I noticed the 2013 Proust group and was disappointed that I'd missed that and very nearly started the first volume when I saw this group, so I thought I'd hold fire and start with the rest of the group.
I'm planning to read the Vintage 6 volume set of the Moncrieff/Kilmartin/Enright translation on Kindle as it seemed the best option for me and is easily available here in England. I've got the first two volumes but I may switch translations along the way if I feel that would be better.
I've never actually tried Proust before so I'm excited about diving in. I've literally only read a few random sentences or quotes in other books so I'm not sure what the experience will be like. My main concern is that there will be too many art and literature references that I won't understand - if that's the case I will probably just use my 'Ulysses' approach - which was 'read it slowly, try to take it all in but if you don't understand it then move on to the next sentence'. It seemed to work for me...

a sampler of the first chapter of Paintings in Proust relevant to the first volume
Thanks Guy. I intend on making use of 'Paintings in Proust'. I just wonder if that's just the tip of the iceberg.
Thanks for the link Joni.
Thanks for the link Joni.

Monsieur Proust's Library

Today I found a link to the 2013 Proust reading group (in the 1001 BtRBYD group) and went in search of such a group for 2014 where I found all you! I'm very excited to read Proust, who I've never attempted before. I work well with deadlines and public accountability, so I have high hopes for success!
(I promise in future posts to use fewer exclamation marks.)

I have read Proust before, but am excited about the new annotated "Swann's Way." So, I would like to read along with you and see how Carter's editing compares with the other translations.

And...the margins in Carter's Swann are luxurious! Especially for a scribbler-of-thoughts and references like me.

William C. Carter's annotated version.

@Jonathan - I must be following you around GR! :) But glad to see you on this group!
Welcome Midnight! I think everyone's getting excited now about diving in to Proust; I know I am. Did you like Gormenghast? I loved 'Titus Groan' & 'Gormenghast' but didn't care for 'Titus Alone'.
I seem to like having a big reading project and have tackled a few over the years. I'm interested to know of others' big projects - failures as well as successes. One of my failures was Heidegger's 'Being & Time'. I got about halfway through from sheer perseverance but realised that I wasn't really taking anything from it - so I quit and was relieved to do so.
I've just taken 'Paintings in Proust' out from the library and next to it was A Night At The Majestic - when Joyce met Proust; I didn't take it out though...maybe next time...
I seem to like having a big reading project and have tackled a few over the years. I'm interested to know of others' big projects - failures as well as successes. One of my failures was Heidegger's 'Being & Time'. I got about halfway through from sheer perseverance but realised that I wasn't really taking anything from it - so I quit and was relieved to do so.
I've just taken 'Paintings in Proust' out from the library and next to it was A Night At The Majestic - when Joyce met Proust; I didn't take it out though...maybe next time...

Interested to know how you will like Paintings in Proust. As of right now, I don't plan on getting any aids as of yet, but we'll see how it goes. I've also been invited to Don Quixote (sp?) and might try and tackle that as well. The only other big ones I've decided on, that I started two years ago (not realizing how much I had to read) were
1. complete works of Shakespeare
2. complete works of Austen
3. complete works of Dickens
Dickens will take the longest, but I'm enjoying him the most. Almost done with Austen, just a few obscure books left to read. And Shakespeare gets easier to read with each one. Maybe almost halfway done with him.
Proust is one I've really been looking forward to, and after that, the next big one might be Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, another I've only recently acquired.
Yeah for big tomes!

midnightfaerie wrote: "The Iliad was a big one for me as well as War and Peace, both of which I wasn't too impressed with. I loved Gormenghast! All of them! The 3rd one was difficult to get into, and it definitely was..."
Wow! An impressive list. I don't usually commit myself to 'complete works' as an author usually produces a lot of forgettable material that I'm happy to ignore. :-)
I finally read 'The Iliad' a year or so ago and really liked it - how can a book about a single battle be interesting - but it is; Don Quixote is fun - how can a single joke be entertaining for 900 pages? But it is.
I've actually never read any Austen or any of the Brontes though I'm aiming to read some soon. Shakespeare just bores me for some reason.
For years I've been toying with reading Casanova's memoirs in full - 12 volumes I think! Maybe after Proust...
Wow! An impressive list. I don't usually commit myself to 'complete works' as an author usually produces a lot of forgettable material that I'm happy to ignore. :-)
I finally read 'The Iliad' a year or so ago and really liked it - how can a book about a single battle be interesting - but it is; Don Quixote is fun - how can a single joke be entertaining for 900 pages? But it is.
I've actually never read any Austen or any of the Brontes though I'm aiming to read some soon. Shakespeare just bores me for some reason.
For years I've been toying with reading Casanova's memoirs in full - 12 volumes I think! Maybe after Proust...



Edit: I see in reading the translations thread that some people have read this. Perhaps we could get a literary criticism or books about Proust/ISoLT thread?



"Perhaps we could get a literary criticism or books about Proust/ISoLT thread? "
A word of caution...
Reading Proust is a little like a detective story...with the seventh and final volume, arguably, the most rewarding.
The goal is to read the last volume as Proust intended. So, wise readers will try to avoid spoilers.
The problem...whenever you begin reading anything about Proust, chances are that somewhere along the line you will discover something that will lessen your enjoyment of the novel.
Antoine Compagnon believes the book should be read "innocently."
Remember, Swann's Way was published in 1913.
Then, the war pushed the second volume, Within a Budding Grove, to 1919;
The Guermantes Way, 1920/1921;
Sodom and Gomorrah, 1921/1922;
(Proust dies in 1922.)
The Captive, 1923;
The Fugitive, 1925;
Time Regained, 1927
So, it took the French readers fourteen years to discover the ending!
(I explain to my friends that ISOLT was similar to Harry Potter....waiting for the next volume as you grew older.)
Many of the 2013 readers have sworn-off any outside reading, because they want the "true" experience, just like those first French readers.
"Paintings in Proust" by Eric Karpeles is an excellent resource...but as the pictures are accompanied with Proust's corresponding passages, there are zillions of spoilers if you read ahead.
Hi Joni. I admit Casanova could get a bit boring but I don't think it's just about his seductions. He travelled about Europe, got involved with court intrigues and politics, met famous people etc. Also, I like the period and I like reading highly subjective memoirs. I just think his name has become associated with his sexual exploits.
Marcelita, that's interesting. I hope that Proust isn't like a detective novel as I normally don't like them. I usually think that any book that can be spoilt by finding out the ending isn't worth reading. Though I think there may be something about reading it 'innocently'.
Marcelita, that's interesting. I hope that Proust isn't like a detective novel as I normally don't like them. I usually think that any book that can be spoilt by finding out the ending isn't worth reading. Though I think there may be something about reading it 'innocently'.

The only thing I've seen on it is this:
A little Monty Python humor


Ha! No fear...not in the Sam Spade-mode at all!
Proust weaves a brilliant tale that is revealed in the last volume.
Naturally, the reader is continually wondering...that is what I meant by "a little like a detective story."
And for those who re-read the novel...the "clues" are skillfully embedded.
"We guess as we read..." Marcel Proust (The Fugitive)
Thanks for the warning Marcelita; I'll try to watch out for any spoilers on my pre-Proust prep. I just didn't think it would be an issue with his work.
Re 'Paintings in Proust', I'm just going to use it initially to view the paintings and get to know some of the artists mentioned as I don't know much about visual art. I'll probably ignore the text at this stage - so hopefully there won't be any spoiler issues there.
Re 'Paintings in Proust', I'm just going to use it initially to view the paintings and get to know some of the artists mentioned as I don't know much about visual art. I'll probably ignore the text at this stage - so hopefully there won't be any spoiler issues there.

HOLD THE PHONE! Are you telling me that I'm going to be scratching my head through six books before I finally realize what is going on? Or, is it just that there's an interesting twist at the end that makes me realize I'd misunderstood everything that I'd read up to that point? Or, or, nevermind. Don't tell me. I want Proust to pop that cherry. LOL!


You're making me want to start reading it right now!


The only thing I've seen on it is this:
A little Monty Python humor"
LOL

Antoine Compagnon spoke at The Morgan about the difference between reading and re-reading the novel. He reaffirmed the reality that a reader will only read it once...as the "first" time. He recommends reading it "innocently."
For me...reading for the first time was like a present, one doesn't want to be told what is inside the box, as the bow is being pulled loose.
However, I understand some may want to hear/read about it from others...before they read it. It's a personal preference.
My Proust-prep got serious today: I had my very first madeleine - dipped in tea of course....yum! yum!

Joni wrote: "I'm jealous Jonathan. I've got so far as finding several madeleine recipes but I've as yet to bake. Baked a batch several years ago and didn't like them (found them too dry) but then I didn't dunk ..."
Well, I bought mine:-) I was just walking around the supermarket and my eye caught the word 'madeleine' and I did a double-take...so I had to buy them...it was fate!
Well, I bought mine:-) I was just walking around the supermarket and my eye caught the word 'madeleine' and I did a double-take...so I had to buy them...it was fate!

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/8...
Thanks for the link Joni, it looks like an interesting book. I find the arts/science divide peculiar; I'm a physics graduate who enjoys art & literature but this was quite unusual when I was studying. I could never understand why for most people it was either/or.
For me, smells spark memories more than taste. The other day I smelled the smell of my first classroom!
For me, smells spark memories more than taste. The other day I smelled the smell of my first classroom!

And what was that class room smell? More importantly, Proust would ask you what it evoked and how you felt about it?
I want to actually start using Goodreads and I love reading projects so I'll be joining y'all.
Well, I'll be reading with the group but I probably won't be baking madeleines. So maybe 2/3 Prousting.




Hi Gloria
I like what you say and your approach - particularly creating that space in your mind (pity there's no like button here). Cheers

After you read the novel, you will appreciate Roland Petit's ballet "Proust - Les Intermittences du Coeur."
If you watch it now...there will be spoilers!
I was first assigned to read Swann's Way during a Modern European Novel course I took as an undergraduate in college. I don't remember exactly why, but I didn't really read it, I kind of skimmed it. Probably too much other reading to do. I recall the professor in that course had us watch excerpts of a movie adaptation--Swann in Love, I believe--starring Jeremy Irons. My memories of the skimming and the movie are now quite vague being almost 30 years ago. I then successfully read the Penguin translation of Swann's Way (by Lydia Davis) a few years ago. I loved the cover design and was intrigued by the project of having different translators for each volume in the novel. I read a lot of it on the train to work, I recall. I remember liking it, but there was a lot that either I didn't follow or didn't fully appreciate based upon my life experience and world view. I started the second volume in the Penguin series, but abandoned it eventually, succumbing to fatigue or restlessness or both. Since then, I've toyed with the idea of reattempting the summit of Mount Proust. Proust is one of those authors I see referenced continually in all sorts of places. I've had too many false-starts to count since then. I've probably read and reread the first 100 pages of Swann's Way a half dozen times. And then, I encountered the work of Arnold Weinstein, a lit professor at Brown University, who writes a lot of popular criticism books and whose lectures are sold by The Great Courses company. His perspective on the value of literature and the value of this book in particular got me enthused to give it another try. So, I started again, and then I saw this group and decided that making the reading a social experience might help with my perseverance in reading the entire work. I have chosen the Modern Library edition on Kindle. I like Kindle because I can read it on my iPhone as well as my Kindle Paperwhite and the built-in dictionary and link to wikipedia helps with the occasional daunting vocabulary words and the frequent obscure references to artists, artwork, fin de sicle France, etc. Also, I like the ability that Kindle gives to perform keyword searches. If I find a reference to a character who I have forgotten, that search feature should come in handy to reacquaint me with him/her. The backlighting is great also for when I wake up in the middle of the night, a frequent occurrence in a chronic insomniac like myself, and want to check back in on the novel. I am hopeful that the Kindle edition will allow for a more immersive & portable reading experience. So, I must confess that I have started the book again and so I will not necessarily be keeping the exact pace as the group, but I look forward to revisiting what I have read in the light of what others have to say about it.
About me: I am 45 years old and live in South Florida with my wife and our 16-and-half year old Shih Tzu (every day is a blessing at this point). I work as a product manager for an online research solutions company that sells primarily to academic, public and corporate libraries. I'm grateful to Alia for organizing the group and I look forward to sharing my impressions of In Search of Lost Time as well as reading those of others.
About me: I am 45 years old and live in South Florida with my wife and our 16-and-half year old Shih Tzu (every day is a blessing at this point). I work as a product manager for an online research solutions company that sells primarily to academic, public and corporate libraries. I'm grateful to Alia for organizing the group and I look forward to sharing my impressions of In Search of Lost Time as well as reading those of others.

Overextended myself... again. I started War & Peace at the beginning of December. Bosh. I somehow thought I'd be finished with it in a month's time. Sadly, that is nowhere near my actual accomplishment.
Guess I'll start Proust... in February? Maybe I'll be able to catch up with the group... But, there are no madelines in my near future.
Books mentioned in this topic
How Proust Can Change Your Life (other topics)How Proust Can Change Your Life (other topics)
A Night at the Majestic (other topics)
Monsieur Proust's Library (other topics)
Paintings in Proust: A Visual Companion to 'In Search of Lost Time' (other topics)
I tried reading Proust many years ago but became distracted. My life was a lot more hectic then, so I'm hoping that now I can give Proust the time he deserves. I'm hoping that the group structure will keep me focused.
As for why read NOW... you know how it is...suddenly everywhere you turn a writer's name keeps popping up and you know it's time you picked up his books.