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Within a Budding Grove
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2017 Proust Challenge, Book 2: Within a Budding Grove (February 15th to March 31st)
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Gill
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Feb 08, 2017 07:21AM

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Just a reminder that while people are welcome to read and comment here any time, our "official" read a long will be from 15 Feb. to March 31.

Are you reading or listening to this one Pink?

I'll be starting soon, too. Probably this weekend or sometime next week.


Seems that Proust is spinning the wheel and showing us other sides of our characters.
In the first couple of pages, we get a different view of Swann and Dr. Collard.
These different views seem to solidify our earlier discussion about people having many sides but we usually only know one or two of these sides and that's enough for us to think we know someone.
I have to say that I'm not happy that Swann has dumbed himself down to fit into Odette's world. But perhaps this is just the narrator's view of things.


Something to ponder as we read along.


Hmm, I never before thought about the ostracizing side of Swan Lake.
To me the ballet is about a love affair that goes very wrong.
Like Swann the Prince is a bon vivant mostly concerned with socializing & evading marriage until he falls in love with the swan queen Odette. (view spoiler)

I suppose at one time, there was the economic side to consider as well but that would be more Odette's side; not Swann's. He had no economical reason for marrying Odette and all the social reasons not to marry her, at least from what we know now.


I don't know the story well but the Princess, for one. The curse ostracizes her by confining her to the lake and away from her family/friends in the castle. Even the Prince couldn't bring her back to the fold.
On the other hand.... if Swann declared his love for Odette, who is actually Odile, and then marries, the analogy may work....we'll have to wait and see whether Odette is Odile.
But, I'm not sure that Proust intended to write a parallel to any other work. He may be ruminating on time and memory. That's the impression I got from Swann's Way.

Can anyone advise me: how connected are the books? Curious as to whether I could join at book 2 and start there or if I should really read book 1 first?

So far, the characters from Swann's Way return in Within a Budding Grove. Since the story seems to follow life, if you started at Within A Budding Grove, it would be like meeting people at a different stage of life than those of us who met them in Swann's Way. That may not make a difference once you get to know the characters. ....if that all makes sense.

Agreed. There's always "the other side", isn't there?
Another thing I always find interesting in these sorts of stories is the deception itself.
In essence, the Prince vowed his love to Odette. That vow came from his heart and soul for Odette and he spoke it to a body that was made to look like Odette. Therefore, his vow was for Odette in every way......yet because of a deception, the vow was spoken to another person, which somehow makes a heartfelt vow to one's true love applicable to someone one who lies and cheats.
So, in these tales, who you speak the vow to is more important than the essence and true meaning of the vow.
It's a twist I understand being made but one that takes something away from a vow made from the depths of a soul.


However, Life isn't fair or equal and things happen. Maybe that's an angle we can take into Swann's story? We don't know yet how the two got together. Maybe deception is part of it and Odette is truly Odile? I hope we find out.

Well, the books are technically a single novel and many of the themes/images/memories introduced in the first two sections of Swann's Way are repeated and referenced often in the later volumes. I would definitely read Combrey and Swann in Love from the first volume and Balbec in the second volume and maybe skip the other sections if you want to get "caught up". (This was recommended as a "cliff notes" version of Proust in a reference book I read alongside volumes 3-7 of Proust last year).

I'm puzzled about (view spoiler)
I did like getting a different view of (view spoiler)

I'm 13% done, page 79 in my edition, and Marcel mentions that a particular person pronounces afternoon without the middle syllable, as aft noon .
So I wondering what the text reads in French. Is this a literal translation or figurative?
Am I correct that the phrases in French are apres midi, and thus ap midi or perhaps apres di?
I get hung up on the darndest things.


About 25% into the book.
(view spoiler) ["br"]>["br"]>

I'm puzzled about [spoilers removed]]"
Yes, I believe what is under spoiler tags is correct. Apparently Proust is supposed to be funny, but I am not good with satire so I had to trust my side-read guides were correct about that.

(view spoiler)
I can almost hear Ella Fitzgerald singing Solitude

Joan, that is the literal translation of the original title in French. I think it is meant to be salacious and a little bit naive, both at the same time.
Joan wrote: "The translation I am reading is titled In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flower, which sounds sort of salacious to me."
The same title in Italian All'ombra delle fanciulle in fiore. And IT IS salacious!
The same title in Italian All'ombra delle fanciulle in fiore. And IT IS salacious!
Joan wrote: "Near the end of the section At Mme Swann's
"During these periods when sorrow, though already beginning to wane, still persists, there is a difference between the mode of sorrow caused by the obses..."
I didn't know that song, but I find you're right. Even if I find the protagonist rather "morbid", as he was with his mother in the first book!
"During these periods when sorrow, though already beginning to wane, still persists, there is a difference between the mode of sorrow caused by the obses..."
I didn't know that song, but I find you're right. Even if I find the protagonist rather "morbid", as he was with his mother in the first book!

I'm puzzled about [spoilers removed]]"
Yes, I believe what is under spoiler tags is correct. Apparently Proust is supposed to be fu..."
Well he ain't no


I wonder if (view spoiler) ["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>

"During these periods when sorrow, though already beginning to wane, still persists, there is a difference between the mode of sorrow caused..."
The title Solitude in my post is a hyperlink to a YouTube video.
The protagonist is unusal isn't he?
I wonder how parents today would deal with such an asthmatic, nervous, morbid little boy.
I've no children of my own but my step-son was asthmatic (but cheerful) and it was sometimes alarming.
Joan wrote: "LauraT wrote: "Joan wrote: "Near the end of the section At Mme Swann's
"During these periods when sorrow, though already beginning to wane, still persists, there is a difference between the mode o..."
I sometins wonder if parents make such kids as him!
"During these periods when sorrow, though already beginning to wane, still persists, there is a difference between the mode o..."
I sometins wonder if parents make such kids as him!

I'm puzzled about [spoilers removed]]"
Yes, I believe what is under spoiler tags is correct. Apparently Proust is supposed to be fu..."
Hmmm, I am not finding him funny but my sense of humor is definitely more English than French. Though I was amused by Marcel's reaction to his first trip to the theater!
I am about a quarter of the way through & am finding this book easier reading than Swann's Way. Maybe it is just because I have become accustomed to Proust's style...

(view spoiler) knowledge.

"...one should make a rule of never speaking of oneself, given that it is a subject on which we may be sure our own view and that of others will never coincide."


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