The Letters of Marcel Proust
Translated by Mina Curtiss
New Introduction by Adam Gopnik
“They do paint a picture of a young man on the make, in one of the most enviable times ever to be alive; and, with the Dreyfus case stirring and the Great War approaching, they also paint a picture of how that time darkened. More movingly than perhaps any other body of literary letters, though, they show a great novelist coming into his maturity.”
—Adam Gopnik
This wonderful collection of Marcel Proust's letters, selected and translated by Mina Curtiss, is both a revelatory introduction to the great writer and a treasure trove for those readers more familiar with his À la Recherche du Temps Perdu. Mina Curtiss especially chose these letters as apt illustrations of Proust's growing sensibility and intellectual power during the gestation of the novel. Indeed, many of the characters in the book are drawn from the men and women we meet here. The letters are also exciting as an unfolding panorama of the Belle Époque and for their superb insights into literature, art, and music.
May 2006, Letters, French Literature, 5 x 7 1/2, 462 pages, Paperback, $17.95, ISBN 1-885586-45-0
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About the Author
Mina Curtiss, sister of Lincoln Kirstein, was born in Boston in 1898. She worked with Orson Welles and John Houseman at the Mercury Theater of the Air from 1935 to 1939. A graduate of Smith College, she taught there for many years. Among her best-known works are Letters of Marcel Proust, Bizet and His World, and A Forgotten Empress: Anna Ivanovna and Her Era, 1730-1740.Back to Non-Fiction Titles