Author | Message |
Marcel Proust - In Search of Lost Time who read the entire 6 volume novel? i've read one of the volumes a while ago and liked it but i'm wondering if anyone on here has read all of it. how many damn pages is it? there's a new boxed set available and i'm thinking of getting it: http://www.amazon.com/Sea...72&sr=11-1 is it humanly possible to read them all one after the other in o let's say 2 weeks? without going insane? thanks and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
that would give me a headache all that reading! maybe I should get my eyes tested | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
IstenSzek said: who read the entire 6 volume novel? i've read one of the volumes a while ago and liked it but i'm wondering if anyone on here has read all of it. how many damn pages is it? there's a new boxed set available and i'm thinking of getting it: http://www.amazon.com/Sea...72&sr=11-1 is it humanly possible to read them all one after the other in o let's say 2 weeks? without going insane? thanks tried reading it once but never got into it, maybe if u were on holiday with no interruptions u could ? by the way your thread title makes my bath or shower one look really dumb lol [Edited 7/27/07 5:45am] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
jami0mckay said: IstenSzek said: who read the entire 6 volume novel? i've read one of the volumes a while ago and liked it but i'm wondering if anyone on here has read all of it. how many damn pages is it? there's a new boxed set available and i'm thinking of getting it: http://www.amazon.com/Sea...72&sr=11-1 is it humanly possible to read them all one after the other in o let's say 2 weeks? without going insane? thanks tried reading it once but never got into it, maybe if u were on holiday with no interruptions u could ? by the way your thread title makes my bath or shower one look really dumb lol [Edited 7/27/07 5:45am] could you read "A Suitable Boy"? | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
ZombieKitten said: jami0mckay said: tried reading it once but never got into it, maybe if u were on holiday with no interruptions u could ? by the way your thread title makes my bath or shower one look really dumb lol [Edited 7/27/07 5:45am] could you read "A Suitable Boy"? couldn't get going with it, could you? or 'The god of small things' either, finished The Shadow Of the wind recently that was an easier read lol | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
jami0mckay said: ZombieKitten said: could you read "A Suitable Boy"? couldn't get going with it, could you? or 'The god of small things' either, finished The Shadow Of the wind recently that was an easier read lol I think I am still up to p42 after a year | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
ZombieKitten said: jami0mckay said: couldn't get going with it, could you? or 'The god of small things' either, finished The Shadow Of the wind recently that was an easier read lol I think I am still up to p42 after a year u made it further than me | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
jami0mckay said: ZombieKitten said: I think I am still up to p42 after a year u made it further than me but don't ask me what it is about | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
ZombieKitten said: jami0mckay said: u made it further than me but don't ask me what it is about lol I always buy books like that fooling myself that i'll read then and then just end up watching Friends on tv | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
jami0mckay said: ZombieKitten said: but don't ask me what it is about lol I always buy books like that fooling myself that i'll read then and then just end up watching Friends on tv I think I took that book back to the op-shop, can't see it on my shelf any more! oh well, what a shame | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
i want to read these books from beginning to end, but i find it hard to know how to read them, if that makes any sense.
i have a problem with classical literature, and the problem is all mine. i think i've been so thoroughly weened on minimalist, modern literature that it's hard for me to slow myself down enough to enjoy all the description and languid, floral imagery that gets packed into classical writing. i read proust, and an impatient little voice in my head keeps saying, "alright, what's the point? wrap it up!" and, of course, the entire point of proust is that he is not ABOUT to "wrap it up". i suppose proust wouldn't be considered "classical literature" compared to works that are hundreds or thousands of years old. still, i think he wrote in a time when literature was what people used for movies/television/internet/etc. today. there were higher stakes for authors when he lived, and the task of description was a lot heavier. i think the challenge for me in cracking these books is to put myself in that mindset, of completely giving myself over to all this rambling, beautifully worded description and exposition, and not worrying about where it's going or what i'm supposed to take from it. and for me, THAT'S FREAKIN' HARD. i remember wanting an electronic proust translator so i could just scan it over a page of writing and have a little screen pop up a translation like: "dude, i'm bummed." | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I tried (well, that's a lie - I didn't try much at all) to read Swann's Way, once, and felt it flew far above my head. I decided then and there to consider any and all Proust beyond me. "She made me glad to be a man" | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
jillybean said: I tried (well, that's a lie - I didn't try much at all) to read Swann's Way, once, and felt it flew far above my head. I decided then and there to consider any and all Proust beyond me.
i think it's all about getting comfortable with sentences that go on for an entire page or two. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Anxiety said: jillybean said: I tried (well, that's a lie - I didn't try much at all) to read Swann's Way, once, and felt it flew far above my head. I decided then and there to consider any and all Proust beyond me.
i think it's all about getting comfortable with sentences that go on for an entire page or two. i love that! it's like -holy flippin cow, is this entire chapter just one long sentence? and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Anxiety said: "dude, i'm bummed."
you've just covered all six volumes! but for real, my attention span is very much like what u have described. i have trouble sticking through one book -- quite sure six just won't happen. http://elmadartista.tumblr.com/ http://twitter.com/madartista | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
IstenSzek said: who read the entire 6 volume novel? i've read one of the volumes a while ago and liked it but i'm wondering if anyone on here has read all of it. how many damn pages is it? there's a new boxed set available and i'm thinking of getting it: http://www.amazon.com/Sea...72&sr=11-1 is it humanly possible to read them all one after the other in o let's say 2 weeks? without going insane? thanks What happened to The Corrections? | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
2the9s said: IstenSzek said: who read the entire 6 volume novel? i've read one of the volumes a while ago and liked it but i'm wondering if anyone on here has read all of it. how many damn pages is it? there's a new boxed set available and i'm thinking of getting it: http://www.amazon.com/Sea...72&sr=11-1 is it humanly possible to read them all one after the other in o let's say 2 weeks? without going insane? thanks What happened to The Corrections? i mixed them up i already read the corrections ages ago and it was pretty so-so. i was more than halfway through the recognitions a while back, but through some personal crisis i forgot all about it and now i have to start it all over again because i hate starting just in the middle somewhere simply because i read the first part... anyway, what i read was great a bit hard i have to admit, but still great. i like a challange. and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
madartista said: Anxiety said: "dude, i'm bummed."
you've just covered all six volumes! but for real, my attention span is very much like what u have described. i have trouble sticking through one book -- quite sure six just won't happen. i want to try all 6 and see if i go insane and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
IstenSzek said: 2the9s said: What happened to The Corrections? i mixed them up | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Didn't TheResistor get through all of Remembrance? If not I remember he made some serious headway about a year ago. [Edited 7/27/07 15:29pm] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
IstenSzek said: madartista said: you've just covered all six volumes! but for real, my attention span is very much like what u have described. i have trouble sticking through one book -- quite sure six just won't happen. i want to try all 6 and see if i go insane I've read all 6 volumes...twice! First time through, I was reading other books between the volumes. I had trouble getting in and out of Proust reading mode. I read too quickly, and I never felt properly immersed. Second time, I was more prepared and relaxed. I read nothing but Proust and made my way through the novels in succession. I was also in a pretty relaxed mental state (no job or school & no immediate need to look for work) and I may have had to reaffirm for myself every once in awhile that I was reading for the sake of enjoying it and escaping, not reading to 'get through it'. In other words, no two-week limit. That's like setting your kitchen timer to remind yourself when to stop meditating. I don't know if it's personal preference, but the translations I've read of Proust make me think that he is a very smooth, seamless writer. It's easy to just drift away on the current. I wouldn't call it dense (until you're in a recollection embedded in another recollection) the way I would call say, Thomas Pynchon dense. Now there's someone who's phrasing causes me to re-read sentences because I didn't understand them, not because my mind drifted. "I got the devil in me, girl." - 'John the Baptist', Afghan Whigs
"Love has no other desire but to fulfill itself." | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
2the9s said: IstenSzek said: who read the entire 6 volume novel? i've read one of the volumes a while ago and liked it but i'm wondering if anyone on here has read all of it. how many damn pages is it? there's a new boxed set available and i'm thinking of getting it: http://www.amazon.com/Sea...72&sr=11-1 is it humanly possible to read them all one after the other in o let's say 2 weeks? without going insane? thanks What happened to The Corrections? Highjacking this to say I loved The Corrections! "She made me glad to be a man" | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
jillybean said: 2the9s said: What happened to The Corrections? Highjacking this to say I loved The Corrections! Franzen actually wrote an essay several years ago on Gaddis (author of The Recognitions, the book Istenszek was reading), called "Mr Difficult," where he slams Gaddis for being unnecessarily obscure and hard. Critic Ben Marcus later wrote a great rejoinder in Harper's. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
PeteZarustica said: IstenSzek said: i want to try all 6 and see if i go insane I've read all 6 volumes...twice! First time through, I was reading other books between the volumes. I had trouble getting in and out of Proust reading mode. I read too quickly, and I never felt properly immersed. Second time, I was more prepared and relaxed. I read nothing but Proust and made my way through the novels in succession. I was also in a pretty relaxed mental state (no job or school & no immediate need to look for work) and I may have had to reaffirm for myself every once in awhile that I was reading for the sake of enjoying it and escaping, not reading to 'get through it'. In other words, no two-week limit. That's like setting your kitchen timer to remind yourself when to stop meditating. I don't know if it's personal preference, but the translations I've read of Proust make me think that he is a very smooth, seamless writer. It's easy to just drift away on the current. I wouldn't call it dense (until you're in a recollection embedded in another recollection) the way I would call say, Thomas Pynchon dense. Now there's someone who's phrasing causes me to re-read sentences because I didn't understand them, not because my mind drifted. and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
IstenSzek said: i want to try all 6 and see if i go insane
You mean insanER... right? | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
HamsterHuey said: IstenSzek said: i want to try all 6 and see if i go insane
You mean insanER... right? you sir, know me too damn well and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I am bored. But I do not feel like reading Proust.
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
HamsterHuey said: I am bored. But I do not feel like reading Proust.
i bet i know what you do feel like and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
IstenSzek said: HamsterHuey said: I am bored. But I do not feel like reading Proust.
i bet i know what you do feel like Actually, going back to bed beckons most, of all possibilities. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
HamsterHuey said: IstenSzek said: i bet i know what you do feel like Actually, going back to bed beckons most, of all possibilities. Sounds like you're living Proust. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |