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Terence Kilmartin (1922–1991)

Author of Time Regained / A Guide to Proust

3+ Works 343 Members 3 Reviews

Works by Terence Kilmartin

Time Regained / A Guide to Proust (1992) 242 copies, 3 reviews
A Guide to Proust (1983) 100 copies

Associated Works

Swann's Way (1913) — Translator, some editions — 12,881 copies, 207 reviews
In Search of Lost Time (1913) — Translator, some editions — 4,344 copies, 50 reviews
In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flower (1918) — Translator, some editions — 4,335 copies, 60 reviews
The Guermantes Way (1922) — Translator, some editions — 3,156 copies, 45 reviews
Sodom and Gomorrah (1922) — Translator, some editions — 3,043 copies, 44 reviews
Time Regained (1927) — Translator, some editions — 2,445 copies, 31 reviews
The Fugitive (1925) — Translator, some editions — 1,463 copies, 18 reviews
The Captive / The Fugitive (1923) — Translator, some editions — 1,356 copies, 30 reviews
The Captive (1923) — Translator, some editions — 1,204 copies, 17 reviews
Anti-Memoirs (1967) — Translator, some editions — 485 copies, 2 reviews
Memoirs of Hope: Renewal and Endeavor (1970) — Translator, some editions — 92 copies, 1 review
On War (1968) — Translator, some editions — 54 copies
Venice Stories (Everyman's Library Pocket Classics Series) (2018) — Translator — 40 copies, 1 review
The Boys (1969) — Translator, some editions — 35 copies, 2 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Kilmartin, Terence
Legal name
Kilmartin, Terence Kevin
Birthdate
1922-01-10
Date of death
1991-08-17
Gender
male

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
I feel like I should throw myself party, finally having finished "Time Regained" -- the final volume in Marcel Proust's magnum opus "In Search of Lost Time." Like other volumes, this book alternated between brilliant and maddening. No one can make an observation that so fundamentally demonstrates the human character like Proust; and I'm fairly certain no one can go on and on about such strange and small details, such as slipping on a flagstone.

In the final installment, our narrator attends a show more party after decades absence from the social scene to find with shock that they have all aged considerably, and hence so has he. He spends much of the novel trying to reconcile his vision of these people with the differing characters they are now.

Even though "In Search of Lost Time" was very challenging and slow going for me, I am so very glad to have read the series. It is certainly deserving of its reputation as one of the great modern novels.
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I once read a review on Proust’s work that authoritatively informed me that by reading "In Search of Lost Time" it would make me a more perceptive reader and a better writer. Having just finished the series, I can’t vouch for that yet but I can say that it was the most challenging, enriching, and comprehensive narrative I’ve ever read. Proust was a master of words. There must be a million ways to express the pain of losing a loved one, the fear and anxiety of knowing you have been show more cheated on, the pride and joy of success, and the melancholy of contemplating death. And Proust used them all. The pain was palpable, but throughout the series, as he ruminated about his life and the lives of his many friends and acquaintances, his neurotic rambling was often astoundingly humorous.

Volume VII, the conclusion of "In Search of Lost Time", brings the reader full circle. Twenty years have past since Marcel entered society. He suffered love that didn’t last, and friendships that he came to feel “only existed in his mind”. He never married nor had children. He had always intended to write that great novel and accumulated pages upon pages of material but was always so easily distracted. And even though he was a part of the highest circles of society, after he lost Albertine, he moved back to Combray (where he spent his childhood) and became a recluse. Now suffering poor health and depression he fears he will never fulfill his life’s goal and become a successful writer. He realizes all those years of idle play going to “barbarian festivals called dinner parties” was just wasted or “Lost Time”.

In many ways "Time Regained" was my favorite of the series. After a prolonged absence from society Marcel attends a reception at the Guermantes’. Proust uses this “dinner party” scene (over 250 pages) to bring together all the primary characters of the series. It’s a colossal reunion. Marcel gets to see who survived World War I and who triumphed in society. The setting is the same, but everything has changed. Many of the revered are now white haired and wrinkled, feeble and obsolete. Marcel is forced to face the harsh reality that he too is aging, running out of time. But while at the dinner party Marcel makes a miraculous discovery. He begins to have a vivid recollection of forgotten incidents from his past and has the joyous revelation that he could still produce his opus, or at least he will try, and perhaps if his health holds out, he will succeed. The conclusion of "In Search of Lost Time, Time Regained" is a precious culmination of Marcel’s visual perceptions of all the society people and his philosophical reflections of growing old, the regrets of lost time, and the hope of regaining one last chance to find meaning in life.

Ironically, Proust died before the last three volumes of "In Search of Lost Time" were ever published.
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bookshelves: currently-reading, fradio, radio-4x, published-1927, wwi, glbt, bdsm, autumn-2013, france
Read on November 18, 2013


Paris is ravaged by the Great War. Marcel despairs at his own failures, but the simplest of discoveries awakens astonishing possibilities. Stars James Wilby.

Spank Me!

Goodness but he tied (handcuffed) everything up well, and at the end of this vast opus we are left with the certain knowledge that Marcel will, at last, sit down and start writing a book; he will start show more with a bell, a kiss, dipped madeleines, and the sweep of Swann's Way.

That's if folks - a circular epic that pulls every emotion known to man across the red hot coals of time.

2* Swann's Way
2.5* Within a Budding Grove
3* The Guermantes Way
3.5* Sodom and Gomorrah
4* The Prisoner and The Fugitive
4* Time Regained
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Rating
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