Marcel Proust documented his existence so lavishly--albeit in fictional form--that many of his biographers have functioned as little more than code-breakers, doggedly translating art back into life. It's a great pleasure, then, to welcome Edmund White's slender, superbly artful account. A novelist himself (as well as a biographer of Jean Genet), White beautifully evokes "the France of heavy, tasteless furniture, of engraved portraits of Prince Eugene, of clocks kept under a glass bell on the mantelpiece, of overstuffed chairs covered with antimacassars and of brass beds warmed by hot-water bottles." And he's no less canny at summoning up Proust's personality, in all its neurotic, contradictory glory.
Of course, Proust's life can't truly be separated from his art. Every biography of him is bound to operate in the shadow of Remembrance of Things Past, and White has some shrewd things to say about that mammoth work, whose style he describes as "an ether in which all the characters revolve like well-regulated heavenly bodies." Yet the focus remains on Proust and on his unlikely transformation from momma's boy to social climber to world-class genius. Like his subject, White often proceeds by anecdote. His book is packed with telling, hilarious little nuggets, which find Proust being snubbed by that "powdered, perfumed, puffy Irish giant" Oscar Wilde or luring back his lover Alfred Agostinelli by buying him an airplane.
At the same time, White conveys the considerable pain that Proust endured as an invalid, an artist, and (more to the point) a closeted homosexual. No doubt these factors shaped his rather hopeless take on human affections, which impoverished his life even as they enriched his writing. "Proust may be telling us that love is a chimera," White writes, "a projection of rich fantasies onto an indifferent, certainly mysterious surface, but nevertheless these fantasies are undeniably beautiful, intimations of paradise--the artificial paradise of art." In White's view, this recognition makes his subject not only a supreme poet of impermanence but the greatest novelist of the century. Here, of course, it's possible to quibble. But the world would be an emptier place indeed without Proust's mighty masterpiece--and readers curious about its brilliant, bedridden creator should start with White's witty and exquisite portrait. --James Marcus
From Publishers Weekly
In this quietly brilliant contribution to the Penguin Lives series (see review of Crazy Horse, p. 58), White has resuscitated the art of biographical appreciation?a form favored by the first generation of writers who could be considered to exemplify a gay sensibility (Walter Pater, Henry James, Edmund Gosse)?and brought it out of the closet. He follows Proust's evolution from social-climbing dilettante to dedicated artist, placing him in the social milieus of high-society Paris and turn-of-the-century arts and letters. As in his acclaimed full-length biography of Jean Genet, White uses the life of his subject to examine the modern history of homosexuality, and he does so with the same combination of earthiness and worldliness that has marked his essays and autobiographical fiction since the 1970s. By now Proust is perhaps the least mysterious of writers, blessed with several good biographies and many excellent studies (helpfully noted in White's bibliography); but while White claims that his work owes "everything" to the most recent of Proust's biographers, Jean-Yves Tadie, no one can match White's sensibility or his sympathy for the subject. His criticisms of Proust's work are consistently trenchant and insightful, and he brings to Proust's life the earned, respectful familiarity of a distinguished acolyte. Alain de Botton's How Proust Can Change Your Life marked a revival of popular interest in Remembrance of Things Past; White's small marvel of economy and organization should supersede de Botton's book as a handy introduction to one of the century's greatest novelists. Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
White's portrait of Marcel Proust (1871-1922) heralds the debut (along with Larry McMurtry's Crazy Horse, LJ 11/15/98) of Penguin's new series of biographies edited by James Atlas. White, author of Genet: A Biography (LJ 1/94), attributes the recent fascination with Proust to the current popularity of the memoir. Proust, White says, is the master of all memoirists; one who, in Remembrance of Things Past, is able to capture the richness of the past through language, characterization, and the realization that "memories come flooding back to us in their full, sensuous force only when triggered involuntarily by tastes or smells or other sensations over which we have no control." Although he achieved fame in his lifetime and was considered a great wit in Parisian literary circles, Proust struggled continuously with his homosexuality and poor health. White's simple and elegantly written biography weaves literary criticism with respectful insight, and will appeal to general readers as well as scholars. Highly recommended.?Diane G. Premo, Rochester P.L., NYCopyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
The New York Times Book Review, Peter Ackroyd
White has a novelist's eye for the telling detail or the remarkable phrase...
From AudioFile
David Case's refined delivery of this adventurous look at Proust's motivations and personality is done with a mixture of "litany and spurn"-in other words, perfect Proustian style. Case expertly intensifies the effect of Proust's flaws, which seem at times to predominate. For those without an ear for Case's accent, names and places are less recognizable then they would be in print, but it adds a lilt of irony and an undertone of subversion to a sometimes bizarre, sometimes confused existence. Proust resolves to forgive the private lives of geniuses, and so can we, with Case's lively assistance. M.L. (c) AudioFile 2000, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine
Marcel Proust