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In Search of Lost Time
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Buddy Read > In Search of Lost Time by Marcel Proust

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Gilbert Just finished book three The Guermantes Way. I find Proust a bit of a bore, but that's just me.
Starting book four Sodom and Gomorrah.


message 152: by John (new)

John R Well done, Gilbert - you're making great progress, and are bang on schedule.


message 153: by Liane (new)

Liane | 150 comments Wow! I am so behind. Persisting though.


message 154: by John (new)

John R I'm in the same boat.


message 155: by Lorraine (new)

Lorraine | 397 comments I just finished book 1 of 2 of Le côté de Guermantes (The Guermantes Way). I liked it better then the first time.


message 156: by Piyangie, Classical Princess (new)

Piyangie | 3569 comments Mod
I'll probably finish Chapter 1 of Guermantes Way tonight. There is lot of talk of about Alfred Dreyfus case here which reminded me of Zola. I'm hoping to read J'Accuse by Zola after finishing this. I was meaning to read it last year but completely forgot! I wish I had read it before reading Guermantes Way. To all who are yet to start reading, a little reading into Dreyfus case will be useful.


message 157: by Lorraine (new)

Lorraine | 397 comments Piyangie wrote: "I'll probably finish Chapter 1 of Guermantes Way tonight. There is lot of talk of about Alfred Dreyfus case here which reminded me of Zola. I'm hoping to read J'Accuse by Zola after finishing this...."

Like you I will need to read Dreyfus after that book.


message 158: by Lorraine (new)

Lorraine | 397 comments Piyangie wrote: "I'll probably finish Chapter 1 of Guermantes Way tonight. There is lot of talk of about Alfred Dreyfus case here which reminded me of Zola. I'm hoping to read J'Accuse by Zola after finishing this...."

Piyangie, if you feel like it we can do a buddy read. If not possible, do not worry.


message 159: by Piyangie, Classical Princess (new)

Piyangie | 3569 comments Mod
Lorraine wrote: "Piyangie wrote: "I'll probably finish Chapter 1 of Guermantes Way tonight. There is lot of talk of about Alfred Dreyfus case here which reminded me of Zola. I'm hoping to read J'Accuse by Zola afte..."

I don't mind, Lorraine. But I could only get to it in June. I don't think I can finish Guermantes Way before the end of the month. Is that okay?


message 160: by Lorraine (new)

Lorraine | 397 comments June or July is fine with me. You decide. You are the one working! 😁


message 161: by Piyangie, Classical Princess (new)

Piyangie | 3569 comments Mod
Lorraine wrote: "June or July is fine with me. You decide. You are the one working! 😁"

Oh yes. Overworked these days. If not for my appointment diary, I wouldn't even know the dates! :) We'll keep the month of June. I'll let you know of a date. Since this is the Proust thread, we can use the archived Emily Zola thread to discuss the book. If you add me as a friend, I can PM you the date we could start.


message 162: by Lorraine (new)

Lorraine | 397 comments Piyangie wrote: "Lorraine wrote: "June or July is fine with me. You decide. You are the one working! 😁"

Oh yes. Overworked these days. If not for my appointment diary, I wouldn't even know the dates! :) We'll keep..."


Perfect. Request sent.


message 163: by Piyangie, Classical Princess (new)

Piyangie | 3569 comments Mod
Great! I've accepted it already. :)


message 164: by Piyangie, Classical Princess (new)

Piyangie | 3569 comments Mod
Finished reading The Guermantes Way. I liked it but not as much as the first two. The writing felt too pompous and less poetic.


message 165: by Lorraine (new)

Lorraine | 397 comments Finished reading Le côté de Guermantes, book 2. I liked it even more then the last time. I liked that the character is showing some strenght when confronted with Charlus and some irony when listening and talking about the Guermantes. He is growing up!


Gilbert Finished the Captive. On to the Fugitive.


message 168: by John (new)

John R Wow - great progress Gilbert!


message 169: by Piyangie, Classical Princess (new)

Piyangie | 3569 comments Mod
Way to go, Gilbert! It's great that you're finishing reading the series within the year. I've planned two more reads - 4th and 5th; the rest will be read next year


message 170: by Liane (new)

Liane | 150 comments Ok, finally finished the second book, Within a Budding Grove. It’s been a rough series of months and remembrance has been on my mind, but not of adolescent love. So this one didn’t resonate with me as strongly as Swann’s Way which fondly recalled many moments from my children’s early years. (The ability to be amused by those memories is in direct proportion to the lengthening gap since their occurrence.)

I pulled out my second volume in the set I have, so I may get started on The Guermantes Way soon, but a short distraction is in order. Regardless, who knows how long this one will take!


message 171: by Mike (new)

Mike Fowler (mlfowler) | 254 comments I just finished Part I of The Guermantes Way having not had much time to read since I was last ill. The pace has picked up and noticeably more dialogue. I do think there is a double entendre with the title, as I believe it alludes both to the path the narrator used to walk along as well as to the way of life of the whole Guermantes family.


message 172: by John (new)

John R Mike wrote: "I just finished Part I of The Guermantes Way having not had much time to read since I was last ill. The pace has picked up and noticeably more dialogue. I do think there is a double..."

Great to have you back Mike - I hope you're feeing much better?

You, and the others in the thread, are putting me to shame - I need to get some focus back and get on with reading In Search of Lost Time, and stop getting sidetracked by other books that catch my eye!

And I agree with you about the two allusions in the title.


message 173: by Lorraine (new)

Lorraine | 397 comments I've finished La Prisonnière (The Captive). Like the first team I've read it, it is not my favorite. Reding 400 pages about jealousy is not the best way to have fun (in my opinion). But (view spoiler)
Will start Albertine Disparue in a week or two.


message 175: by John (new)

John R Congratulations Gilbert - you are making great progress!


message 176: by Mike (new)

Mike Fowler (mlfowler) | 254 comments I finished The Guermantes Way this evening. I enjoyed this one the most so far as it had a faster pace and I enjoyed the elaboration of the Guermantes Way/wit. I'll be taking a short break to read The Princess Bride and have read 1/3 of it in one sitting this afternoon. Looking forward to starting Sodom and Gomorrah as it also progresses my AND list that has been collecting cobwebs this year.


message 177: by Pam, Southwest Enchanter (new)

Pam (bluegrasspam) | 1153 comments Mod
I’m not familiar at all with Proust but found a graphic novel of Swann’s Way, which I just started. The book is the size of a large coffee table book and is 224 pages! That’s one long graphic novel! I’ll see after I finish it if I want to continue with Proust.


message 178: by John (new)

John R That's interesting Pam - I'd never heard of a graphic novel version. I wonder how they manage to reflect some of his longer sentences and paragraphs.


message 179: by Lorraine (new)

Lorraine | 397 comments Pam wrote: "I’m not familiar at all with Proust but found a graphic novel of Swann’s Way, which I just started. The book is the size of a large coffee table book and is 224 pages! That’s one long graphic novel..."

I heard about this book. There was a TV show about Proust during the covid and they interviewed the man who was writing the book while visiting the famous hotel where Proust went when he was young. I agree with you, that at 224 pages it is quite big for a graphic novel!


message 180: by Lorraine (new)

Lorraine | 397 comments Pam wrote: "I’m not familiar at all with Proust but found a graphic novel of Swann’s Way, which I just started. The book is the size of a large coffee table book and is 224 pages! That’s one long graphic novel..."

Is this the book you are reading? https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...

I'm curious of your opinion when you finish.


message 181: by Pam, Southwest Enchanter (new)

Pam (bluegrasspam) | 1153 comments Mod
Lorraine - Yes, that is the book I’m reading! There is a translator’s introduction which talks about some of the difficulties in translating and adapting the text, including the long sentences. So, some changes had to be made obviously. He also asks “Who will want to read this book, and how should they approach it?…the critic Michael Wood imagined that the typical reader would be a person who had always dreamed of reading Proust but had been put off…by the difficulty or by the sheer magnitude of the undertaking.” I can’t say that I’ve always wanted to read Proust BUT, for me, this seemed like a good approach, especially since I do like graphic novels. I’m really interested to get further into it. I’m only on page 18. There’s a helpful glossary and family tree at the end plus a map of Paris.


Gilbert Finished.
I've managed to get through 4,700 pages and found at the end that this is a boring and tedious read.
This is the second time I've read this, and it will be the last.


message 183: by John (new)

John R Congratulations Gilbert! And for the second time.

I think some fatigue is almost inevitable after a surfeit of Proust.


message 184: by Pam, Southwest Enchanter (new)

Pam (bluegrasspam) | 1153 comments Mod
I finished the graphic novel about 3 weeks ago. It didn’t inspire me to read the books though! There were some lines I liked and the illustrations helped but overall I didn’t care for it. Slow and a bit boring. But, at least I now know what it’s about. I’m not sorry I read it but I prefer a faster-paced book, especially for a graphic novel.


message 185: by Nidhi (new)

Nidhi Kumari | 320 comments I finished the second book Within the Budding Grove. I liked it much more than the first because there are many new characters introduced and sketched elaborately by Proust. The second half is more interesting. The first part has a wonderful description of Making of a Masterpiece. I especially liked the train journey and Proust's musings on Elstir's paintings.


message 186: by Piyangie, Classical Princess (new)

Piyangie | 3569 comments Mod
Hi all. It's time for an opinion call. :) We mods of NTLTRC always strive to make changes for the better enjoyment of our classical reading experience for members. This includes some new introductions and some thinning downs. So, we would like to know how you all feel about continuing with the Proust thread for next year. Do you want it to be continued as another year-long buddy read or not? Please let us know of your opinion.


message 187: by Lorraine (new)

Lorraine | 397 comments Hi Piyangie. I’ve started the last book and should have finished by the end of the year. So it is nor necessary to continue this thread. But should people want to continue, I will gladly stay on to participate to the discussion.


message 188: by Nidhi (new)

Nidhi Kumari | 320 comments I would like the thread to continue next year. When this buddy read began in January this year, even then I knew I wouldn't be able to read all 6 books in a single year. So I will try to finish them next year.


message 189: by John (new)

John R I think it would be good to continue it for another year - I'm so far behind that its not worth trying to catch up by the end of this year - so an extension gives me the motivation to keep going.


message 190: by Mike (new)

Mike Fowler (mlfowler) | 254 comments I'm happy for it to continue too. I had expected to easily finish all six in a year but certainly didn't anticipate the year I've had. I'm about a fifth into the fourth volume and expect to finish it in November.


message 191: by Piyangie, Classical Princess (new)

Piyangie | 3569 comments Mod
Thanks all for your input. Another year it is then. :)


message 192: by Mike (new)

Mike Fowler (mlfowler) | 254 comments Nidhi wrote: "I finished the second book Within the Budding Grove. I liked it much more than the first because there are many new characters introduced and sketched elaborately by Proust. The second half is more..."

I found the same, and I too enjoyed the descriptions of Elstir's paintings. I fear that I was picturing English sea side towns rather than French, but close enough!


message 193: by Liane (new)

Liane | 150 comments I'm glad the thread will continue, I too had a rough year and can use the motivation to get back into my next volume with an extended deadline/close.


message 194: by Mike (new)

Mike Fowler (mlfowler) | 254 comments The Dreyfus Affair features very prominently in this yet I only have a passing familiarity with it. Every couple of hundred pages I find myself refreshing my memory by reading the Wikipedia entry. I read a bit more than the summary this evening and was rather impressed. After 12 years of being wrongfully imprisoned, Dreyfus returned to the very army that had betrayed him and served for many more years, including the entirety of The Great War and living on to 1935. Perhaps it's a small blessing that, having suffered a miscarriage of justice due to antisemitism, he passed before the Holocaust.


message 195: by Piyangie, Classical Princess (new)

Piyangie | 3569 comments Mod
I just started reading Sodom and Gomorrah and am very surprised to find a switch in tone. I finished the first short part called the "introduction" and found the writing too dense and preachy. I hope it'll improve in the course.


message 196: by Mike (new)

Mike Fowler (mlfowler) | 254 comments I've been making slow progress simply from a lack of time. From my recent reading (Chapter 2 of Part 2) he does seem to return to his normal tone.


message 197: by Mbuye (new)

Mbuye | 3383 comments Piyangie wrote: "Hi all. It's time for an opinion call. :) We mods of NTLTRC always strive to make changes for the better enjoyment of our classical reading experience for members. This includes some new introducti..."

Piyangie,
I wasn't part of this discussion when it started, so I 've really no business to butt in now. Reading Proust calls for the kind of committment that other great works do not generally demand. I think if even two or three readers have started Proust, and would like to continue, they should be encouraged. I think of myself as a rapid reader, but it took me nearly three years and a bit to finish all six volumes (or twelve, if you are reading the lovely Scott Moncrieff version). It was an absolutely mind changing experience. It can be occasionally discouraging (mainly due to the sentence structures), but it is never ever boring.

But as I say, that's just my way of butting in.


message 198: by Nidhi (new)

Nidhi Kumari | 320 comments Mbuye, I agree with you, it is a great experience and demand particular commitment, other books and challenges get in between so I couldn't t continue, I will be back on track by mid February.


message 199: by Mbuye (new)

Mbuye | 3383 comments Nidhi,

I was able to spend so much time on Proust, because I am retired and could afford to spend time on old Marcel.

With school or college, or kids, or a job with deadlines to meet, other priorities get in the way.

Don't push yourself: Proust has to be read slowly and savoured without stress.

Give him time -- he'll wait.


message 200: by Nidhi (new)

Nidhi Kumari | 320 comments That's very encouraging comment Mbuye. Thanks. Books always wait patiently on their shelves still its human nature to be impatient and keep on reading book after book as if there is no tomorrow.

What quality (of writing) impressed you most after finishing the whole book (or series)?


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