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Swann’s Way by Marcel Proust
Swann’s Way by Marcel Proust










Swann’s Way by Marcel Proust

Swann, man­-about­-town and familiar of royalty, is reduced to walking after midnight, forlorn as a child awaiting a good­night kiss. The novel then takes a further step backwards to tell the story of Swann’s infatuation with the courtesan Odette. A child’s world, and the world of adults the child struggles to imagine, spread out before us, while Proust’s pages teem with incident and puzzle­ment, pathos and humor. Suddenly, he is back in the past, seized by memories of childhood: his clinging attachment to his mother, his dread of his father, summers in the country and the two walks his family was in the habit of taking-one by an aristocratic estate, the other by the house of a certain Charles Swann, to whom a mystery was attached. We first encounter Proust’s narrator in middle age, consumed with regret for his misspent life. Swann’s Way, the first of the seven volumes that con­stitute Marcel Proust’s lifework, In Search of Lost Time, introduces the larger themes of the whole work while standing on its own as a brilliant evocation of childhood, hopeless love, and the French Belle Époque.












Swann’s Way by Marcel Proust