Remembrance of Things Past 1: Swann's Way. Within a Budding Grove

by Marcel Proust

Other authorsC. K. Scott Moncrieff (Editor)
Paperback, 1985

Status

Available

Call number

843.912

Collection

Publication

Penguin, Reprint (1985), Paperback, 1056 pages

Description

On the eve of his marriage, the Counselor makes a risky decision to dealve into the cocaine trade along the Texas-Mexico border. His hope is that this one-time deal will set him and his fiancée on a path to financial freedom, but instead he ends up in a brutal game that threatens to destroy everything and everyone he loves.

User reviews

LibraryThing member Ganeshaka
For a long time, I remember not being sure (afraid to ask my mamma or any of my dear friends, lest I fall in their regard) of the pronounciation of "Proust". Surely, it would seem to rhyme with "oust", and yet what, short of say, glockenspiel, or sauerkraut, could sound more Teutonic? It must then,
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I reasoned, be as if it were spelled "proost"? Avec an accent on the "ooh". Yet this was a time, when I was yet quite young, and the Internet, as such, was a gleam in the eye of a tumescent DARPA. Who could I ask? How could I research this delicate matter? I was several years away from my first class in French. And somehow this hero, this Milton of the corklined boudoir, why would he not choose a nom de plume of more aristocratic panache, like Marquis de Combray, or of resonant consonant force, like Comte Twainn, why would he risk a tenuous immortality and despoil a set of leather bound, gilt embossed volumes - containing the very essence of fin de siecle Fr-ON-ce - with a squishy, escargot evoking, oh-so-emo patronym, however genuine, as "prooost". Yuck.

Who'd da thunk it?

So here I am. Many years later. In the winter of our Amerikan discontent (although really, are we any more divided now than the French were over Dreyfus) -finally proceding, at times at a trudge, at times gliding, but each day, every day, stealing a march, peu by pew, through the Re: church of Tom's per Dieu. It's a B4Udie thing, for sure.

I suffer at times from social anxiety disorder. I suffer at times from boredom. Not to mention, narcissism, irritable bowel syndrome, allergies, and laziness. So it is so wonderful that Proust, like Christ, died on a thousand settees so that I might be forgiven, redeemed, ascended and enter the Paradise of the parlor, the distingue dimensions of the drawing room, the serious mysteries of Society, whose depths I would never, on my own, consider probing - not with a titanium bathyscope, would I in normal life, chance coming near a doyenne, a creature as exotic and horrifying and enticing as a luminescent Irish Lord fished from the depths, with eyeballs on stalks and a translucent skull. I can see myself; I would approach to investigate a facial tidbit, a tasty appearing tic, with a naif temerity, and be swallowed, like Jonah, in a gulp, only to be puked up in disgust, as bourgeois, as dull, as profane as in my darkest awkward nightmares.

So thank you, Marcel (mar-SELL) for all these books. But for now, like Gilberte, I must leave - just for a bit - and dunk my cookies in some tea.

I shall return and recherche.
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LibraryThing member MeditationesMartini
Deft and detailed portrait of French society at the turn of the last century, as the aristocracy gives way socially to the bourgeoisie that has already supplanted it economically? That's the boilerplate, but I dunno, dude. Bourgeois pathology, maybe. What Proust does really, really well - the
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obvious comparison is of course Ulysses, and I'd contend that even if Joyce is a better entertainer and all-round more interesting guy, Proust is the more talented writer - is take you on this Family Circus-style "Billy wander" - the sentences that twist and turn and yet remain so, yes, cartoonishly level and followable like a well-laid row of bricks (bourgeois novel indeed!), or to complete the Billy analogy and get it off my back, like those dotted lines that fall out of his backpack and you can follow them forward and back - in and out through the self and the landscape and the great genius here, or one of the geniuses, is the way Proust captures the effect of impressions of the world around him on the self, and the way they can create permanent change in a body as well as fleeting change that, in its (fleeting) impact, seems like permanency too. Maybe that's why he's so good at people when he treats them like landscape - the extended meditation on Albertine's cheeks and so on, the stock fixture of Françoise who manages generically to make his (nasty but no doubt not entirely invalid) case about the servant classes.

And then sometimes the narrator starts to palpitate and get worked up enough, his feewıngs about a girl or actually often just a paintng or whatever which shows that it is still really just the feelings, the self, not the people, but leave that aside - sometimes the narrator decides to try to treat people like people and it gets him, and Proust, ınto trouble. A lot of it is just France, I suppose - I'm no freedom-fries-surrender-monkeying American knee jerk, but it occurs to me that outside of Tintin and le Petit Prince (and weren't they Belgian?), every French novel I have ever read in my life has been about nasty people doing unlovely things to each other and then being smug about it later. (And every French person I have ever met in real life has been alternately sneering and preciously sentimental, but let it pass - we'll trust that is just chance). And where Balzac and Zola just bring it, and Flaubert with all his genius and crossdresslust gives it so much pathos, and Sartre uses it to get right into the nitty-gritty of the self-loathing that one hopes underlies most or all of these people really - Proust just drops you into the decadence; and like, not the sex, that would at least give this some blood and vigour, but into the decadent, minute-gradations-in-social-status-and-hypernervous-aestheticism mental state of his narrator, which doesn't interfere with the swoony beauty of the walks along Swann's way, but does, when you get into his relations with his boys who are all closeted and his girls - Albertine, Gilberte, Andree - who are all boys - you just want to have a wash. And that's before his creepy insinuating lesbian fixation pops up. And now all of a sudden the proper comparison ıs Humbert Humbert, except that

1. almost everybody in this book has a tinge of Humbert to them, not just Our Narrator. Humbert ıs European snobbery withering in '50s America - this is it in full flower, and makes you want to go "Guys, you're just France, not semidivine beings of pure critical judgment" and also raises the intriguing possibility that I will see a lot of this in new light if I ever get to the next volume and the humiliation of the Great War;
2. for all the biographical reasons, and because he is nameless, we are encouraged to identify the narrator a lot more with the author, making Proust kind of icky himself;
3. against the odds, a teenage Humbert is even creepier than an old one, because like, at least we know how an old guy can get that creepy but for a young kid it is a feat - maybe possible only for a 'sickly' one like our hero;
4. We have to spend a lot longer in Proust's company.

And that's the thing too - around 2/3 through (page 685 for me) you start to get a bit, or a lot, "Okay dude, I getcha. Move on," not because of the abovementioned yuck factor, but because he's just spinning his wheels - repeating, not developing anymore. This certainly is the kind of book a sickly bourgeois with a lot of time on his hands would write. And the sad thing is, it buries the playful glory of his genius, which comes through when he is a kid (because you don't know he sucks yet) and in the charming Swann story in the same way as the beauties of Chopin which he sketches so neatly - but imagine a hundred-hour Chopin nocturne.

And so yeah - tonnes of talent in this warped masterpiece, which I could never have conceived if it did not exist - but hey, Proust was a weird guy. A weird bourgeois guy, and don't you forget it. It would just be easıer to take if he told us at less length.
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LibraryThing member kbullfrog
I love the beginning, but hate Swann's way--tried to read part two twice, and has lulled me to boredom again!

I went to Paris this past year and visited Marcel's grave, and a tiny voice said "read my work" (i swear, and it wasn't the absinth!), but thus far i have not accomplished the task. Will
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try again over the summer with some time by the ocean. Best of luck to you Proust readers, bc when it is good it is so so worth it !
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LibraryThing member pjpjx
what can one say, it's proust, for the all ennui and genius that the name carries,
LibraryThing member hemlokgang
It took me an inordinate amount of time to finish this first volume of "Remembrance of Things Past". I just wanted to savor Proust's eloquent verbosity! His prose is exquisite. This first volume consists entirely of the internal monologue of a man reviewing his life since the time of his youth. The
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protagonist shares the minutiae of his every thought and feeling as he matures from a sickly, isolated child to an adolescent. The reader becomes one with his perceptions, fantasies, anticipated joys, and disappointing realities. The reader is witness to his recollections of those losses of innocence which constitute the rites of passage from childhood to adolescence and young adulthood.

Additionally, Proust manages to convey the social milieu, the changing social structure consisting of the rise of the bourgeoisie and decline of the aristocracy in France.

I very much look forward to the next volume in this series!
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LibraryThing member AlanWPowers
The smell of varnish, or the taste of a madeleine tea-cake, Mama's kiss at bedtime: each holds within it pages of memories for the narrator. I read some in French in a room where both the poet Elizabeth Bishop and the novelist Mary McCarthy stayed, including the hostess in her The Group. While not
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a spoiler, Bishop's sexuality changes Odette for Swan late in the novel.
Proust illustrates Plato: I used to say in Humanities surveys how the Real Chair is the Chair in the mind...others fall apart, spindles and seat. Proust returns every couple pages to his Platonism early on, "Even the simple act of 'seeing someone we know', is, to some extent, an intellectual process"(25).
Swann objects to journalism, with its "fresh trivialities...Suppose that every morning we tore the wrapper off our paper with fevered hands, and we were to find inside--oh! I don't know, say Pascal's Pensées?"(35).
The real in the mind sometimes fades, "He could not explore the idea further, for a sudden access of that mental lethargy which was, with him, congenital, intermittent, and providential--happened, at that moment, to extinguish every particle of light in his brain, as instantaneously as in a later period with electric lighting, it became possible to cut off the supply of light by fingering a switch"(386).

I'm not sure the same mental permanence can be said for Americans with our Cheerios of chilldhood, our memories of new car smell. And our newspapers, our TV fresh trivialities. Maybe.
Proust evokes the sensibility--with an emphasis on "senses"--, he evokes the richness of the mind in a new way. The senses lock on memories tied to sight and sound, such as early songs--for me, some late 50s Rock and Roll, Little Richard, Elvis, Chuck Berry, Fats Domino. Most everybody can recall when they heard a specific song, "Oh, Don-an-na," or "I found my thrill/ On Blueberry Hil...."

An aside, how much this may lose to be classed as "gay lit," though the author was certainly gay.

Read in Modern Library hardback, 1956. I have not read volume II.
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LibraryThing member burritapal
Not done yet, but this is awesome writing.

Language

Original language

French

Original publication date

1913 (Du côté de chez Swann)
1919 (À l'ombre des jeunes filles en fleur)

Physical description

1056 p.; 7.7 inches

ISBN

0140444831 / 9780140444834

Local notes

also NYRB Classics
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