This item has closed 1 buyer bought 1 item
View other items offered by PTO Books and Vinyl2084

Similar products

Reading Lolita in Tehran, A Memoir in Books
R60
R30 shipping
Recollections of a time in the Mountain Kingdom. A Memoir SIGNED by Sonia Horn
R300
Snippets of Time: Memoirs of a Maverick | Lola Watter
R90
Harem Years: The Memoirs of an Egyptian Feminist Huda Shaarawi
R85

The Year of Reading Proust: A Memoir in Real Time - Phyllis Rose

Secondhand
R36.00
Shipping
Standard courier shipping from R60
R60 Standard shipping applies to orders under R100, in most areas in South Africa. R30 Standard shipping applies to orders over R100. Some areas may attract a R30 surcharge. This will be calculated at checkout if applicable.
Check my rate
Free collection
Ready to ship in
The seller has indicated that they will usually have this item ready to ship within 6 business days. Shipping time depends on your delivery address. The most accurate delivery time will be calculated at checkout, but in general, the following shipping times apply:
 
Standard Delivery
Main centres:  1-3 business days
Regional areas: 3-4 business days
Remote areas: 3-5 business days
Buyer Protection How you're covered
Get it now, pay later

Product information

Condition:
Secondhand
Location:
South Africa
Customer ratings:
Product code:
HJGC
Bob Shop ID:
128625780

We combine postage, so do look at our other books on offer.

Books Dispatched within 2 business days.

Condition : Good

Starting with a description of what it feels like to read Proust, Rose moves on to an account of her daily life which the reading of Proust inspired. Set largely in New York City and Key West, Florida, it gives insights into the lifestyles of the talented and famous.

Proust is less the subject of Rose's pleasurable, rambling memoir than its guiding spirit, whose wisdom and worldview Rose invokes as she reviews the travails and satisfactions of a year in her life. A row with her Key West landlady involving potted palms and banana treees; hectic preparations for a dinner honoring a mystery guest (who turns out to be Salman Rushdie); her friend Annie Dillard's cancer scare; and her own mother's halting progress toward death - these and other events take biographer Rose (Jazz Cleopatra: Josephine Baker in Her Time, 1989, etc.) into a Proustian blend of social gossip (mostly of literary Key West) and a remembrance of things in her own past. The passing of time, the attempt to transcend it (in collecting antiquities), the need to create something original before it is too late, and the immense difficulty of doing so, are among the novelist's themes that resonate for Rose. Most affecting is her newfound appreciation of the middle-class suburban 1950s childhood she had long reviled: "I never 'understood' my childhood because I never understood what a happy childhood it was." This encounter with her past culminates in a visit with her sister to their childhood home for the first time in 36 years. Unlike the fictional Marcel, who returns to Paris after a long absence and finds it much changed, Rose finds the house miraculously preserved, like a museum of her childhood, thus bringing no epiphany but merely the satisfaction of memories confirmed. Still, while there is much to savor here, there are disappointments, an occasional sense of incompleteness; we learn more, for instance, about the social hubbub over her dinner for Rushdie than we do about the writer himself. Perhaps the best part of the book is its opening chapter, in which Rose, having overcome her own inability to penetrate Proust, explains richly how one can do so, and why it is worthwhile. (Kirkus Reviews)

About the author (1998)

Of her approach to biography, Rose has said: "Most people think of a biographer as somebody who accumulates facts about people's lives. . . . But I think of myself as somebody who puts the facts of people's lives into different contexts, or emphasizes shape somehow, and puts facts into new structures." A feminist critic, Rose's work has focused primarily on the lives of women. In Women of Letters: A Life of Virginia Woolf (1978), which was nominated for a National Book Award, Rose explores the relationship among Woolf's writing, recurring bouts of mental illness, and sexuality. Her most popular work to date has been Parallel Lives: Five Victorian Marriages (1983), a highly readable and penetrating study of the marriages of several famous nineteenth-century writers. Her latest biography Jazz Cleopatra (1989), is a compelling study of the jazz singer and performer Josephine Baker. A collection of essays, Never Say Goodby, was published in 1991.

Bibliographic information

More from this seller

View all
Volpone: Or, The Fox -- Ben Jonson
R36
Blom en baaierd -- D. J. Opperman
R38
A Century of Sea Stories -- Rafael Sabatini [Editor]
R29
Agter die doellyn
R39

Customer ratings: 1 ratings

Great service, thank you!
18 Mar 2014