
In Search of Lost Time
About this book
On the surface a traditional "Bildungsroman" describing the narrator’s journey of self-discovery, this huge and complex book is also a panoramic and richly comic portrait of France in the author’s lifetime, and a profound meditation on the nature of art, love, time, memory and death. But for most readers it is the characters of the novel who loom the largest: Swann and Odette, Monsieur de Charlus, Morel, the Duchesse de Guermantes, Françoise, Saint-Loup and so many others — Giants, as the author calls them, immersed in Time. "In Search of Lost Time" is a novel in seven volumes. The novel began to take shape in 1909. Proust continued to work on it until his final illness in the autumn of 1922 forced him to break off. Proust established the structure early on, but even after volumes were initially finished he kept adding new material, and edited one volume after another for publication. The last three of the seven volumes contain oversights and fragmentary or unpolished passages as they existed in draft form at the death of the author; the publication of these parts was overseen by his brother Robert.For this authoritative English-language edition, D. J. Enright has revised the late Terence Kilmartin’s acclaimed reworking of C. K. Scott Moncrieff’s translation to take into account the new definitive French editions of À la recherche du temps perdu (the final volume of these new editions was published by the Bibliothèque de la Pléiade in 1989).
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100 Eternal Masterpieces of Literature [volume 2]
Leo Tolstoy, Jonathan Swift, Robert Louis Stevenson, W. Somerset Maugham, James Joyce, Edgar Allan Poe, Jack London, Oscar Wilde, Mark Twain, H.P. Lovecraft, Walter Scott, Rudyard Kipling, D.H. Lawrence, Jules Verne, H.G. Wells, Rabindranath Tagore, Stendhal, Herman Melville, Rebecca West, Bram Stoker, Marcel Proust, Thomas Mann, George Sand, Upton Sinclair, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley