The seventy-five folios and other unpublished manuscripts

Marcel Proust, 1871-1922

Book - 2023

"The seventy-five folios and other unpublished manuscripts contains early versions of six episodes later included in Marcel Proust's À la recherche du temps perdu. Discovered in 2018 and presented here for the first time in English, the folios reveal the autobiographical extent of Proust's work and the 'sacred moment' when his genius blossomed"--

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Subjects
Published
Cambridge, Massachusetts : The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 2023.
Language
English
French
Corporate Author
Bibliothèque nationale de France
Main Author
Marcel Proust, 1871-1922 (author)
Corporate Author
Bibliothèque nationale de France (-)
Other Authors
Jean-Yves Tadié, 1936- (writer of preface), Sam Taylor, 1970- (translator)
Item Description
Originally published by Gallimard in 2021 as: Les soixante-quinze feuillets: d'après le manuscrit conservé à la Bibliothèque nationale de France, Département des manuscrits : et autres manuscrits inédits.
Physical Description
xx, 334 pages ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780674271012
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The fascinating, handwritten early drafts of Marcel Proust's cycle In Search of Lost Time, discovered in 2018, come to life in Taylor's resplendent translation. Found among the papers of a French publisher, these folios are Proust's first attempts at getting down characters and situations that eventually structured his novels. The family disagreements of "An Evening in the Countryside" and the childhood strolls through rural France of "The Villebon Way and the Méséglise Way" introduce the domestic atmosphere and lush landscape that became the setting of Swann's Way. In "Young Girls," the prototype of In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flower, the narrator encounters a coterie of girls at the seaside and schemes to make their acquaintance. "Place-Names: The Place" includes sketches of people encountered while traveling. Throughout, Proust expresses his signature obsessions through his experience of memory, art, and social machinations. The insightful commentary by Dyer traces the trajectories of themes introduced in the folios and notebooks, and observes Proust's efforts to blur, in his writing, the specifics of his own life, disguising his Jewishness and his homosexuality despite leaving clues. This is a magnificent addition to Proust's oeuvre. (Apr.)

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