The Captive
Written by Marcel Proust
Narrated by Neville Jason
4.5/5
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About this audiobook
Marcel Proust
Marcel Proust was born in Paris in 1871. His family belonged to the wealthy upper middle class, and Proust began frequenting aristocratic salons at a young age. Leading the life of a society dilettante, he met numerous artists and writers. He wrote articles, poems, and short stories (collected as Les Plaisirs et les Jours), as well as pastiches and essays (collected as Pastiches et Mélanges) and translated John Ruskin’s Bible of Amiens. He then went on to write novels. He died in 1922.
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Reviews for The Captive
147 ratings6 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This reading is one of the best ways to experience Proust in English
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This book was not as interesting as the previous books in the series to me. But for the first time in the series, the narrator acknowledged that all his thoughts and life events make up this book. He talked about homosexuality more clearly and he was about to make plans for his dream trip to Venice when he heard about Albertine's sudden departure.
I almost thought his relationship dynamic with Albertine was an imprint of Swan and Odette's... Time will tell! - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5While Proust's style will never be a favorite of mine (what with the extremely long sentences & long digressions), I do find that the further I get in the series, the more interesting I find the books.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5My earlier dislike for the narrator that began in the previous volume has expanded into despise, thanks to his obnoxious jealousy over Albertine with whom I'm relating far more at this stage. It made this volume difficult to read with the same detached pleasure because I kept waiting for her too to become frustrated with the narrator's ridiculous behaviour. The irrational jealously is especially maddening to read when placed alongside his confession that he no longer loves her. Why, in that case, has he taken her captive? As an object, and for the occasional callback to his first impression of her when he desired her mystery - before he wanted that mystery to be expelled, as part of possessing her. He has wrought the destruction of their love through this bottled up madness, ultimately to both their miseries.Jealousy is really just the start of it, because the narrator is also extremely possessive and paranoid. He's become certain that Albertine is leading a double life - the one she portrays for his sake, and the other one where her 'true' passions lie. It becomes impossible to know which character to believe. He does seem to catch her in quite a few lies - or is she just that forgetful? She does seem to have an eye for the ladies - or is it just the regular variety of friendships, envies and judgements? It's very hard to guess with only the narrator's (slightly unhinged) perspective as a guide. What is clear either way is that he is transparently controlling, disrupting her plans at every turn for the slim chance that it interferes with some imagined plot she may be hatching. And at the same time, where is his eye wandering? What outrageous lies is he telling? The hypocrosy ... unlike Proust, I have no words. The ending of this volume is extremely satisfying to me and raises the hope I may still enjoy the last two.This is the first volume to have been published after Marcel Proust's death. What he appears to have done was complete the entire sequence, then was fleshing out each volume before its publication. The last three did not fully receive all the attention he would have intended, or as Wikipedia puts it, "the last three of the seven volumes contain oversights and fragmentary or unpolished passages, as they existed only in draft form at the death of the author; the publication of these parts was overseen by his brother Robert.". In this fifth volume the style is not noticeably different, and is as likely as ever to veer away from the action into prolonged pages of descriptive digression. That said, I did get a taste of the oddities. They include this utterly bizarre line: "Then she would find her tongue and say 'My -' or 'My darling -', followed by my Christian name, which, if we give the narrator the same name as the author of this book, would be 'My Marcel' or 'My darling Marcel.'" That isn't simply breaking the fourth wall, that's the (always unnamed) narrator expressing direct awareness that he is a figment of the author's imagination. After this scene, Albertine address the narrator as Marcel now and then, and it's jarring every time. That's the worst of it, if you don't count the premature death of Mme de Villeparisis who apparently turns up alive in the sixth volume. Only one other peculiarity really stuck out at me, when Marcel dedicates a short paragraph in what sounds like his own voice to the man who inspired the character of Charles Swann.Among the tricks of memory that Proust explores this time, the standout for me is how items that I remember seeing in one setting, transposed to another, bring memories and impressions of that other place to infect the new one. Conversely, a setting emptied of its customary belongings will tarnish those associated memories. It's why I've never again set foot in my grandparents' former home since my uncle remodeled it. There is also another element that may come into play when Proust finds his ending in the last volume: this growing sense the narrator has of the profundity of artistic heights that gives them a grace larger than life (more real than the false heights he's anticipated before), when a few key notes of a sonata triggers the same taste of happiness he has enjoyed at key moments of reflection over tea or while strolling the Champs-Elysees. A link appears between memory and happiness triggered by art, and I suspect this will feed into the narrator's own artistic attempts.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The Captive - Marcel Proust (In Search of Lost Time, Volume 5)
The narrator spends years worrying about whether his mistress that he claims not to love, and claims to want to break up with - but only at the right time, is having secret escapades all time with men and women when he's not around. He has become pretty crazy paranoid for this whole book and really the one before it as well. This is at least 50% of the content of the book. Otherwise, Monsieur de Charlus's adventures continue, and the Verdurins get the better of him by turning Morel against him.
In short: Proust is crazy paranoid by the idea that other people exist and have lives separate to his own that he can't know everything about. He looks at how jealous paranoid people think. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Probably no better than the last two parts, I found this part somewhat monotonous in its unvarying themes: jealousy and paranoia. Apart from the pretty tiresome and to some degree predictable storyline this part does deliver what I had come to expect, having read the previous volumes, that is, wonderful description, feelings captured upon the pages as if they were plucked from the very soul, and pure extract of French idiom. I am looking forward to seeing how the story is resolved in the final two volumes.