Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Swann's Way - cover

Swann's Way

Marcel Proust

Translator C. K. Scott Moncrieff

Publisher: DigiCat

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

In "Swann's Way," the first volume of Marcel Proust's monumental seven-part novel, "In Search of Lost Time," the reader is invited into a labyrinthine exploration of memory, desire, and the intricacies of social life in late 19th-century France. Proust's innovative narrative style, which intricately weaves stream-of-consciousness prose with rich, sensory imagery, deftly captures the fleeting nature of time and experience. Set against the backdrop of the French aristocracy, Proust immerses readers in his protagonist's reflections, particularly through the lens of love and art, illustrating how memories are often tinged with the bittersweet specter of nostalgia. Marcel Proust, a member of the French literary elite, drew deeply from his own experiences as a sensitive observer of society. His upbringing in a bourgeois family, combined with his encounters in Parisian salons, provided fertile ground for the exploration of personal and collective memory in his writing. The longing and complexity surrounding love, as embodied in the character of Charles Swann, echo Proust's own tumultuous relationships and desire for understanding within the framework of societal expectations. "Swann's Way" is not merely a narrative; it is an intricate tapestry of human emotions and perceptions. I recommend this seminal work to anyone intrigued by the depths of human consciousness and the quest for identity through memory. Proust's masterful prose promises a transformative reading experience that resonates with the universal pursuit of understanding our own past.
Available since: 11/13/2022.
Print length: 437 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Walking and Other Excursions - cover

    Walking and Other Excursions

    Henry David Thoreau

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    IN THE SPIRIT OF UNDYING ADVENTURE!    Sauntering through natural landscapes is a noble art; and one that Henry David Thoreau held in the highest regard.     Though he is perhaps best known for Walden: Life in the Woods and his essay “Civil Disobedience,” Thoreau was an early advocate of recreational hiking, canoeing, and conserving natural resources. A passionate nature writer, he penned many articles that shared these philosophies and perspectives.    This carefully restored re-creation of the 1863 essay collection Excursions features the nine original essays that were published posthumously:    “Natural History of Massachusetts”    “A Walk to Wachusett”    “The Landlord”    “A Winter Walk”    “The Succession of Forest Trees”    “Walking”    “Autumnal Tints”    “Wild Apples”    “Night and Moonlight”    This revised special edition also includes the original detailed biographical sketch of Thoreau by fellow transcendentalist and friend Ralph Waldo Emerson. Featuring a brand-new foreword by J.F. Penn, best-selling author of PILGRIMAGE: Lessons Learned from Walking Three Ancient Ways, and a fresh introduction from editor Mark Leslie.    ______    "In these ever more fast-moving times, as the constant noise of media in every form buffets us, and bad news from across the world shakes our sense of well-being daily, we can find truth in Thoreau’s words that 'in society you will not find health, but in nature.'" - J.F. Penn
    Show book
  • White Nights - cover

    White Nights

    Fyodor Dostoevsky

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    White Nights, a tale of lonelyness by Fyodor Dostoevsky. 
    Like many of Dostoevsky's stories, "White Nights" is told in the first person by a nameless narrator, a young man living in Saint Petersburg who suffers from loneliness. He gets to know and falls in love with a young woman, but the love remains unrequited as the woman misses her lover. How will it end? 
    Narrated by Michael Ward.
    Show book
  • Never Come Morning - cover

    Never Come Morning

    Nelson Algren

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Bruno Bicek, “Lefty,” is a prizefighter and small-time hood in Chicago. Boxing is his ticket to escape hard times and gang life, but when Bruno doesn’t prevent the brutal gang rape of his girlfriend, Steffi, it tears them apart, their worlds changed forever. Bruno is sent to jail and Steffi to a brothel governed by the brutality of a local crime boss, the Barber. Sinister and dark, the Barber controls Steffi and has no intention of letting her go. Why should he, when he holds all the cards? Bruno and Steffi, who dream of breaking free, learn this in the end and find that for them there will be no bright morning.
    Show book
  • Roman Fever - From their pens to your ears genius in every story - cover

    Roman Fever - From their pens to...

    Edith Wharton

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Edith Newbold Jones was born in New York on January 24, 1862.   Born into wealth, this background of privilege gave her a wealth of experience to eventually, after several false starts, produce many works based on it culminating in her Pulitzer Prize winning novel ‘The Age Of Innocence’ 
    Marriage to Edward Robbins Wharton, who was 12 years older in 1885 seemed to offer much and for some years they travelled extensively.  After some years it was apparent that her husband suffered from acute depression and so the travelling ceased and they retired to The Mount, their estate designed by Edith.  By 1908 his condition was said to be incurable and prior to divorcing Edward in 1913 she began an affair, in 1908, with Morton Fullerton, a Times journalist, who was her intellectual equal and allowed her writing talents to push forward and write the novels for which she is so well known.  
    Acknowledged as one of the great American writers with novels such as Ethan Frome and the House of Mirth among many.  Wharton also wrote many short stories, including ghost stories and poems which we are pleased to publish.  
    Edith Wharton died of a stroke in 1937 at the Domaine Le Pavillon Colombe, her 18th-century house on Rue de Montmorency in Saint-Brice-sous-Forêt.
    Show book
  • The Lost World - cover

    The Lost World

    Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Edward Malone is a newspaperman with an ultimatum: in order to marry the girl of his dreams, he must go on a grand adventure and make a name for himself. He is directed to interview one of the irascible and volatile characters in all literature – Professor George Edward Challenger. By the time the week is out, Edward Malone is one of an elite expedition led by Professor Challenger into an area that has been isolated from all the natural changes of time. It is a lost world of gigantic insects, warring barbaric tribes, and dinosaurs. But once they discover it, they find themselves absolutely, positively trapped in a land that time has forgotten.
    Show book
  • Since I Died - From their pens to your ears genius in every story - cover

    Since I Died - From their pens...

    Elizabeth Stuart Phelps

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Mary Gray Phelps was born on 31st August 1844 in Boston, Massachusetts. 
    Her mother, who wrote the Kitty Brown children’s book series, died when she was only 8.  The young girl asked to be renamed in honor of her mother. 
    Two years later her father married her mother's sister, Mary Stuart, also a writer, but she died of tuberculosis only 18 months later. A mere six months later he married for a third time to Mary Ann Johnson, and they had two sons. 
    Phelps received an upper-class education through her attendance at the Abbot Academy and Mrs. Edwards' School for Young Ladies. She had a natural gift for story-telling and at 13 she had a story published in Youth's Companion and other stories in various Sunday School publications. 
    In most of her writings she used her mother's name ‘Elizabeth Stuart Phelps’ as a pseudonym, even after her marriage in 1888 to Herbert Dickinson Ward, a journalist (and later co-author with her) 17 years her junior. Such was her talent that she gained a wide audience from her first publications.  
    At age 19 she sent her Civil War story ‘A Sacrifice Consumed’ to Harper's Magazine. A generous payment was made together with a request for more works to be sent for publication.  
    During the 1860s she wrote her first books for children, the ‘Tiny’ series and followed up with the 4-volume ‘Gypsy Breynton’ series.   
    In 1868, three years after the Civil War, came ‘The Gates Ajar’, a controversial but best-selling Spiritualist work which told of an afterlife replete with home comforts and reunited families, and their pets, for eternity.  Its success led her to write two more books to complete the trilogy and she was wont to use the word ‘Gates’ in later book titles to allude to this success. She stated that she wrote ‘The Gates Ajar’ to comfort a generation of women devastated by the loss of their loved ones who found no comfort in traditional religion.  
    Phelps became a determined advocate through her lectures and other work for social reform, temperance, women's emancipation, and even clothing reform for women, and in 1874, urging them to burn their corsets. 
    Her deteriorating health was now restricting some of her activities and kept her contributions to mostly literary in nature rather than public appearances. 
    In 1876 Phelps was the first woman to present a lecture series at Boston University. Her presentations, ‘Representative Modern Fiction’, analyzed the works of George Eliot. 
    In 1877 she published ‘The Story of Avis’. The work focuses on many of the era’s early feminist issues, portraying a woman's struggle to balance her married life and domestic responsibilities with her longing to become a painter.  At no time did she attempt to hide, either in real life or her stories, her contempt of the inequities of the then class structure and gender disparities. Her work, ‘Mary Elizabeth’ depicts a homeless girl's choices between theft and begging as a means of survival. ‘One Way to Get An Education’ tells of a child laborer's desire for a better life than mill work offers and sees self-injuring as a way to a better education. Her work often depicted women succeeding in non-traditional careers such as physicians, ministers, and artists. 
    In 1884 came her well-regarded poetry collection ‘Songs of the Silent World’ 
    Along with her husband she wrote two Biblical romances in 1890 and 1891. Her autobiography, ‘Chapters from a Life’ was serialized and then published in book form in 1896.  
    Phelps continued to write short stories and novels up to her death and over her life authored 57 volumes of fiction, poetry and essays.  
    Elizabeth Stuart Phelps died 28th January 1911, in Newton Center, Massachusetts. She was 66.
    Show book