Swann's Way

By (author): "Elizabeth Dalton, C.K. Scott Moncrieff, Marcel Proust"
Publish Date: November 14th 1913
Swann's Way
ISBN1593083777
ISBN139781593083779
AsinSwann's Way
CharactersNarrator/Marcel, Baron de Charlus, Mme Swann, Gilberte Swann, Cottard.
Original titleDu côté de chez Swann
SeriesÀ la recherche du temps perdu #1
Swann’s Way is the first novel of Marcel Proust’s seven-volume magnum opus À la recherche du temps perdu, or Remembrance of Things Past. Following Charles Swann’s opening ruminations about the nature of sleep is one of twentieth-century literature’s most famous and influential scenes: the eating of the madeleine soaked in a “decoction of lime-flowers,” the associative act from which the remainder of the narrative unfurls. After elaborate reminiscences about Swann’s childhood in Paris and rural Combray, Proust describes his protagonist’s exploits in nineteenth-century privileged Parisian society and his obsessive love for young socialite Odette de Crécy.Filled with searing, insightful, and humorous criticisms of French society, this novel showcases Proust’s innovative prose style, characterized by lengthy, intricate sentences that elongate, stop, and reverse time. With narration that alternates between first and third person, Swann’s Way unconventionally introduces Proust’s recurring themes of memory, love, art, and the human experience—and for nearly a century readers have deliciously savored each moment.“Scarcely anyone so stimulates the nerves of language in me,” wrote the novelist Virginia Woolf, who idolized Proust, “it becomes an obsession.”Swann’s Way, as well as the longer novel of which it is part, is framed as a search for time—lost time. Time is the element of life, the medium of all experience, and yet it destroys us and all that we value.—from the Introduction by Elizabeth Dalton