Manny's Reviews > À la recherche du temps perdu
À la recherche du temps perdu
by
by
Manny's review
bookshelves: french, parody-homage, too-sexy-for-maiden-aunts, transcendent-experiences, life-is-proust, pooh-dante
May 25, 2009
bookshelves: french, parody-homage, too-sexy-for-maiden-aunts, transcendent-experiences, life-is-proust, pooh-dante
Read 2 times. Last read January 1, 2004.
When you read Proust, and learn to appreciate his extraordinary, dreamy, hypnotic, truly inimitable style (this review is a mere shadow on the wall of a Platonic cave), which succeeds in making the syntax of language, usually as invisible as air, into a tangible element, so that, like literary yogis, we may feel, for the first time, how enjoyable the simple activity of reading, like breathing, can be; and discover the delights of sentences which took the author days to construct and us an hour to read, unpacking layers of subordinate clauses to discover, nestling inside their crisp folds, a simile as unexpected and delicious as a Swiss chocolate rabbit, wearing a yellow marzipan waistcoat and carrying an edible rake, found in its cocoon of tissue paper under a lilac bush during a childhood Easter egg hunt; or, steaming across the calm waters of a limpid grammatical lake in the capable hands of Captain Marcel and his crew, confident that they know the route from generations of experience, and will in due time, exactly on schedule, arrive at the main verb, pointing us tourists to it with justifiable, understated pride; then you will gradually come to identify with the alchemical author, spending twenty years sitting, propped up by pillows, in his velvet dressing-gown, transmuting the lead of his accumulated experience into gold, surrounded by galley proofs which he constantly rereads and revises, pasting in a parenthesis in the middle of this sentence, an apposition in that, so that the papers are gradually festooned, like bizarre Christmas decorations, with loops and curlicues of afterthoughts; and waiting for life, his unfaithful mistress, to leave him, simultaneously knowing that it is inevitable, and also that she will never do so, at least as long as this, the greatest and strangest of all novels, is still not quite finished...
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Reading Progress
Started Reading
(Other Paperback Edition)
Started Reading
January 1, 2004
–
Finished Reading
(Other Paperback Edition)
January 1, 2004
–
Finished Reading
May 25, 2009
– Shelved
May 25, 2009
– Shelved as:
french
May 25, 2009
– Shelved as:
parody-homage
May 25, 2009
– Shelved as:
too-sexy-for-maiden-aunts
April 23, 2011
– Shelved as:
transcendent-experiences
November 29, 2011
– Shelved as:
life-is-proust
March 12, 2013
– Shelved
(Other Paperback Edition)
March 12, 2013
– Shelved as:
french
(Other Paperback Edition)
March 12, 2013
– Shelved as:
too-sexy-for-mai...
(Other Paperback Edition)
March 13, 2013
– Shelved as:
life-is-proust
(Other Paperback Edition)
March 13, 2013
– Shelved as:
celebrity-death-...
(Other Paperback Edition)
March 29, 2013
– Shelved as:
pooh-dante
Comments Showing 1-50 of 117 (117 new)
A common urban legend! There is indeed an important episode near the beginning of Vol 1, but most of the book is about other things. See e.g. my reviews of Vol 2 and Vol 3...
Seems like he's more eliptical than a modern cypher.
Re: Proust v. Nabokov. I've only read Lolita and half of A la Recherche, but they seem quite dissimilar in style based on that small amount of reading. I can definitely see the DFW-Proust connection though. Maybe that's why I'm digging IJ so much.
Oh. It's actually supposed to make you want to read him. I have clearly not got it quite right yet...
That is so funny.
When it is put to him.
Nabokov: Prétentieux? Moi?
Ha. That's what they all say. Personally, I am broken of the heart that my mother sold our set of that Proust sentence before I could start reading it.
No no. Wait. Just let me finish the page. No? The sentence. Just the sentence.
Oh, OKAY. Take the damn thing.
Manny wrote: “is still not quite finished...”
Nor is your sentence finished, unless the ellipsis at the end counts as a stop. The never-ending sentence is an infinite quest. While longer sentences (by Barthelme, for example) tend to have a bitter flavor, yours is delicious. The textbook Mathematical linguistics, written by András Kornaiin, suggests that in "journalistic prose the median sentence length is above 15 words." So, at 305 words, yours is well above average.
All levity aside, your review is inspiring. I’ll need some inspiration if I’m going to read it. Fortunately, I saw the review just in time. À la recherche du temps perdu is the current selection by the Book of the Decade Club.
If the review persuades you to read Proust, I will be very happy!
...Call me a masochist, your review convinced me to delve in anyway haha
A common urban legend! There i..." I was wondering why this review was written in the style of Hemingway... and then I realised goodreads must have the kind of word limit that Marcel would vehemently dissaprove of. Seriously though, that was spot on, you really caught Proust's voice, and that is some trick to pull off. As for the madeleine? It is always a turning point in a young man's life, the moment redolent of the scent of gardenia, cheap cologne and the bathwater of a guest presenter on the Late Review, when you realise that a lot of people in public life who are regarded as the font of all wisdom, when discussing Proust, only ever mention that morsel. It's then that you begin to speculate just how far they've probably read into the work itself, and start to wonder about how first hand their knowledge is of a number of books... To end, I echo the chap above, a true five star review.
I think Marcel Proust and the Cottaging Baron Colouring Book is a killer concept. It's entirely possible that Heuet is already planning to write it, but looking at this page it seems he probably isn't going to get there until about 2030. Maybe a nice letter from your godson will speed things up though?
Thanks, Manny.
Then you read his review of in search of lost time, and he's just like, "Oh, yeah, I can also write liquid lightning prose. Whatever."

Oh, thank you! I was concerned that I was making it too easy, and not giving people even a suggestion of the real Proust experience...