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How Proust Can Change Your Life (Audio) - Community Reviews back

by Alain de Botton, Nicholas Bell
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Musings/Träumereien/Devaneios
Musings/Träumereien/Devaneios rated it 8 years ago
“To make [reading] into a discipline is to give too large a role to what is only an incitement. Reading is on the threshold of the spiritual life; it can introduce us to it: it does not constitute it.” Quote from one of Proust’s books, In “How Proust Can Change Your Life” by Alain de Botton “Even ...
Garden-of-Stars
Garden-of-Stars rated it 9 years ago
There is a certain, unspoken list of writers and philosophers whose work is deemed a necessary read in academic circles, Proust being one of them. Luckily I was assigned to read this one for a French cultural studies course, glad to finally be able to learn more about what specifically makes Proust ...
shell pebble
shell pebble rated it 11 years ago
With the gentlest and kindest mockery possible, de Botton makes a very strong case for celebrating and learning from the unlikeliest of teachers: Marcel Proust.In Shikasta Doris Lessing's extraterrestrial protagonist describes Proust as a great sociologist and anthropologist, which chimes with de Bo...
Books etc.
Books etc. rated it 13 years ago
I've read Swann's Way thrice, that is, its first 3pages. Then I would decide that this was not the right time to read Proust. That if I want to give his writing some justice then I'll have to give it attention & time that I sorely lack. Because there's no way I can follow his writing in the time sti...
debnance
debnance rated it 15 years ago
If you have considered reading this book, you are probably aware of who Proust is, but I honestly knew little about him before reading this book. I’ve been on a French author reading kick for, oh, five months or so, and I’ve had this book in my TBR for quite some time, so this was a must-read for me...
Ms. Margie
Ms. Margie rated it 20 years ago
I enjoy reading (and re-reading) this so much more than I've enjoyed my one (and thus far unsuccessful) attempt to read Proust. de Botton is an absolute delight to read.
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