Swann's Way
Pages
468
Year
1913
Difficulty
Challenging
Themes
memory, time, love, childhood, art
A man dips a madeleine in tea and the entire world of his childhood floods back. This is the most famous moment in modern fiction, and it is only the beginning. Swann’s Way, the first volume of In Search of Lost Time, is the gateway to the most ambitious novel ever written.
Why Start Here
Swann’s Way is the only place to start with Proust. It establishes everything: the narrator’s childhood in Combray, the theory of involuntary memory that underpins the entire work, and the devastating novella-within-the-novel “Swann in Love,” which tells the story of an obsessive affair with a woman who isn’t even the protagonist’s type.
The opening section, about falling asleep and waking in unfamiliar rooms, is one of the great passages in literature. The madeleine episode is the key that unlocks the entire seven-volume structure. And “Swann in Love” can be read as a standalone masterpiece of jealousy and self-deception. Proust’s sentences are long, but they are not difficult in the way that academic prose is difficult. They are sinuous and hypnotic, following the movements of thought with a precision that no other writer has matched.
What to Expect
A long, slow, immersive novel in three sections. The prose demands attention but rewards it instantly. No conventional plot: the pleasures are in observation, memory, and the texture of consciousness. The Lydia Davis translation (Penguin) is the most acclaimed recent version. Best read in unhurried stretches.
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