Swann’s Way

Swann’s Way by Marcel Proust, published by Penguin Publishing Group in 1999, is a significant work in the realm of literary fiction, spanning 434 pages in English. This first volume of Proust’s seven-part masterpiece, “In Search of Lost Time,” serves as both a psychological self-portrait and a meditation on the artistic process, setting the stage for the themes that will unfold throughout the series.
Readers will encounter the narrator, a sensitive individual drawn to fashionable society, as well as Charles Swann, a wealthy connoisseur entangled in a complex romance within the high-society circles of nineteenth-century Paris. The narrative explores the intricacies of French society and delves into the search for a transcendental reality that exists beyond the constraints of time. This unabridged reprint of the classic 1922 edition offers a comprehensive look at Proust’s profound insights into life and art.
Official synopsis Publisher
Both a psychological self-portrait and a profound meditation upon the artistic process, Proust’s seven-part masterpiece “In Search of Lost Time” changed the course of 20th-century literature. “Swann’s Way, ” the first volume, introduces the novel’s major themes and the narrator, a sensitive man drawn in his youth to fashionable society. Its focus then shifts to Charles Swann, a wealthy connoisseur who moves in high-society circles in nineteenth-century Paris and a victim of an agonizing romance. This masterly evocation of French society and its rendering of a search for a transcendental reality independent of time, ranks as a landmark of world literature. Unabridged reprint of the classic 1922 edition.
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