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À la recherche du temps perdu

Cette saga monumentale plonge dans les méandres de la mémoire et du temps, explorant les transformations de la conscience humaine et la nature subjective de la réalité. À travers un flot continu de souvenirs et de réflexions, se déploie une riche tapisserie de relations sociales, d'art et d'amour. L'œuvre saisit avec maestria la nostalgie d'un passé révolu et la quête de sens dans un monde en perpétuelle mutation.

Remembrance of Things Past
Remembrance of Things Past. Vol.1

Ordre de lecture recommandé

  1. 1

    Scott Moncrieff's [volumes] belong to that special category of translations which are themselves literary masterpieces ... his book is one of those translations, such as the Authorized Version of the Bible itself, which can never be displaced A. N. Wilson

    Remembrance of Things Past. Vol.1
  2. 2

    Remembrance of Things Past

    • 1216pages
    • 43 heures de lecture

    Marcel Proust whiled away the first half of his life as a self-conscious aesthete and social climber. The second half he spent in the creation of the mighty roman-fleuve that is Remembrance of Things Past, memorializing his own dandyism and parvenu hijinks even as he revealed their essential hollowness. Proust begins, of course, at the beginning--with the earliest childhood perceptions and sorrows. Then, over several thousand pages, he retraces the course of his own adolescence and adulthood, democratically dividing his experiences among the narrator and a sprawling cast of characters. Who else has ever decanted life into such ornate, knowing, wrought-iron sentences? Who has subjected love to such merciless microscopy, discriminating between the tiniest variations of desire and self-delusion? Who else has produced a grief-stricken record of time's erosion that can also make you laugh for entire pages? The answer to all these questions is: nobody.

    Remembrance of Things Past