This has been a good year for Proust, for seasoned Proustians as well as aspiring readers of his masterwork, A la recherche du temps perdu. We have two new biographies, not including Jean-Yves Tadiés superb Marcel Proust: A Life, hailed in France in 1996 and recently published here in English, and we have Roger Shattucks Prousts Way, condensing into a portable volume the professors useful ideas from his earlier critical works. [1]
All this Proustiana has brought a flood of daily reviews and commentary, amusing in what it scarcely conceals: how few people have actually read the novel. Our journalists are increasingly inclined, or seem obliged, to call A la recherche the greatest novel of the twentieth century, taking their cue perhaps from Graham Greenes comment that Proust was the greatest novelist of the twentieth century, just as Tolstoy was in ...
Daniel Mark Epstein wrote the libretto for the opera Jefferson and Poe, with music by Damon Ferrante
more from this author
This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 19 October 2000, on page 13
Copyright © 2012 The New Criterion | www.newcriterion.com