|
How Proust Can Change Your Life | 
enlarge | Author: Alain De Botton Publisher: Picador Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy New: £2.74 You Save: £5.25 (66%)
New (33) Used (18) from £0.97
Rating: 21 reviews Sales Rank: 4413
Media: Paperback Pages: 224 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.8 x 5.2 x 0.6
ISBN: 0330354914 Dewey Decimal Number: 809 EAN: 9780330354912 ASIN: 0330354914
Publication Date: April 9, 1998 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: Brand new book dispatched from stock in the UK
| |
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 16 more reviews...
An erudite meditation on Marcel Proust's life - and its lessons January 28, 2008 Rolf Dobelli (Luzern Switzerland) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Are you tired of self-help manuals? Is that because the authors often seem to need help themselves? Or they all spout the same buzzwords and clichés? Or they are banal and boring? It sounds as if you are all self-help-manualed-out. Perhaps you need something different. Try Marcel Proust, revered master of exquisite expression and luminous prose. In Search of Lost Time, also called Remembrance of Things Past, Proust's one-and-a-quarter-million-word magnum opus, does not contain a trite sentence or conventional thought. You can learn much about living from such a profound genius, including how to spend your time, how to see and feel things, and why, sometimes, it is best just to stay in bed. Alain de Botton is your witty, often hilarious guide, providing valuable life lessons from Proust's writings and thoughts. getAbstract finds this ingenious, utterly original treatment thoroughly enjoyable. Wishing you the same.
Sublime January 21, 2008 Daintree Peters (London & Sydney) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I'm afraid to go and read 'In Search...' now, in case it is de Botton that I've been seduced by rather than Proust!
How to appreciate the simple things August 9, 2007 Damian Patrick Kelly (Manchester UK) 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
Reading anything by de Botton I feel a serenity descend upon me. His writing seems to have a soothing effect and this book was no different. In "How Proust can change your life" he takes the wisdom to be found in the novels of Proust and shows how they can help us to live better lives. Or perhaps to make us aware that we live better lives than we think. There are sections on how to love life, read for yourself, take your time, suffer succesfully, express your emotions, be a good friend, open your eyes, be happy in love and put books down. I loved this book and it has made me feel I can read Proust and appreciate it properly. Swann's Way is next for me and I am looking forward to it with anticipation. But whether you intend to read Proust or not this book is well worth reading.
de Botton on top form June 21, 2007 Mr. S. Miller (Glasgow, UK) 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
There is a section in this fantastic, unique work in which de Botton describes Proust's fanatical devotion to John Ruskin, the English art critic, an admiration which verged on infatuation. This book reveals that de Botton feels much the same way about Proust. Happily, the reader is left in absolutely no doubt as to why the author feels that way so insightful are the observations and so pertinent are the excerpts from "In Search of Lost Time". In fact, those without the time to read Proust's masterpiece (that is, almost everyone) will find no better synthesis of that great novel, and no more persuasive illustration of Proust's brilliance. The whole experience is truly life-changing and, whilst the title does not reveal this, de Botton himself deserves some of the credit for that too.
Best of his lot February 17, 2007 Vinny 16 out of 16 found this review helpful
While some of his later books struggle to marry the chirpy narrative style with the weight of ideas, this one does it perfectly. de Botton's finest hour. it will make you want to read Proust. And that is no mean feat. gloriously, it will allow you to sound as though you have read it all without ever having opened a page of the impenetrable texts!
|
|
| www.pcprotech.co.uk | |