Available Formats
Letters to the Lady Upstairs
By (Author) Marcel Proust
Translated by Lydia Davis
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
15th January 2018
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Diaries, letters and journals
Humour
843.912
Hardback
112
Width 136mm, Height 191mm, Spine 13mm
180g
A charming, funny, poignant collection of twenty-three letters from Marcel Proust to his upstairs neighbour
102 Boulevard Haussmann, an elegant address in Pariss eighth arrondissement.
Upstairs lives Madame Williams, with her second husband and her harp. Downstairs lives Marcel Proust, trying to write In Search of Lost Time, but all too often distracted by the noise from upstairs.
Written by Proust to Madame Williams between the years 1909 and 1919, this precious discovery of letters reveals the comings and goings of a Paris building, as seen through Prousts eyes. Youll read of the effort required to live peacefully with annoying neighbours; of the sadness of losing friends in the war; of concerts and music and writing; and, above all, of a growing, touching friendship between two lonely souls.
A collection of letters to the neighbours about noise would seem unpromising material for a book, unless they were written by Marcel Proust, who was so sweet, kind, funny and charming, that his letters are a delightful surprise ***** Daily Telegraph
A delight. This slim book is special, not only because it reveals details of Prousts life, but also in its simple celebration of friendship Observer
Translator Lydia Davis reveals Prousts brilliant, darting mind at work in an unfettered, conversational manner Arts Desk
Nearly as famous as Marcel Prousts madeleine is his cork-lined bedroom at 102 Boulevard Haussmann, where he lay in bed and wrote most of A la Recherche du temps perdu Letters to the Lady Upstairs gives us an oblique portrait of this closeted life. Times Literary Supplement
A haunting portrait of a friendship both evanescent and intense between two people who lived within earshot of one another, separated only by a few inches of plaster and floorboard, but who scarcely ever met New Statesman
Full of wit and playful decorum New Yorker
A trove of charming correspondence from literatures most famous noise phobic Kirkus
Marcel Proust is the one of the world's most famous writers. Renowned for his epic novel in seven volumes, In Search of Lost Time, he is widely regarded as one of the greatest novelists of all time. He lived at 102 Boulevard Haussman between 1907 and 1919 and died in 1922. Lydia Davis is a prize-winning translator of French literature and the author of one novel and six short-story collections. She won the Man Booker International Prize in 2013.