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Within a Budding Grove
- Narrated by: John Rowe
- Series: Remembrance of Things Past, Book 2
- Length: 23 hrs and 2 mins
- Unabridged Audiobook
- Categories: Literature & Fiction, Classics
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What listeners say about Within a Budding Grove
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- saly
- 09-08-16
"Like floating down a river..."
Beautiful book and beautifully read. I've heard reading Proust feels like floating river and I couldn't agree more. Listening to Proust however, even better!
4 people found this helpful
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- Fothergill
- 31-01-21
Begin here !
You must , you have to listen, and if you haven’t, you must begin to hear Proust now,neither pretentious nor elitist, I have to admit to never finishing any one of the whole set, but John Rowe drew me in, somehow, it worked, or perhaps it is fifteen years on, and I have more time? I have now completed all, on Audible, and it has been a joy, with the help of Mr Rowe, of course !
3 people found this helpful
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- beatrice
- 04-10-09
insomniac's dream
Proust writes marvelous stuff, but his interminable sentences can make his work difficult to read. Now, John Rowe to the rescue: he reads so sensitively, it's like listening to one's own thoughts. I was so glad to find he's started another volume of Proust's masterwork, and look forward eagerly to the second installment, and hopefully more to come. Insomniacs, take note: with Marcel Proust/James Rowe on your iPod, you may be able to jettison the Lunesta. I mean this in a good way (and I think that Proust, who wrote at night in that cork-lined room, would have approved): the narrative is absorbing, complex, seductive, and nonlinear, perfect for bedtime (or the wee hours of the night), as it hardly matters where you leave off or pick it up again.
31 people found this helpful
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- Maggie
- 13-10-10
more John Rowe, s.v.p.
having now completed the second volume of proust's amazing seven volume work, i am more convinced than ever that the ONLY voice for proust's narrator is john rowe. more, please.
19 people found this helpful
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- Rajeev A.
- 04-02-13
A fine reading of Proust
Rowe's performance feels less arch than Neville's. I like them both but preferred Rowe, this time around. I only wish Rowe had finished the series. Or, if he has, I wish Audible would make the rest of it available.
8 people found this helpful
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- bart
- 21-01-19
John Rose is a rapturously good narrator
Impressive narration by John Rowe. Volumes 1 and 2 are brilliantly done. So disappointed in the narration on Volumes 3 and forward.
4 people found this helpful
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- BHMMary
- 06-02-18
A written and listening masterpiece
John Rowe made this listening experience possible for me. Other readers, at least via the samples, were bad to awful. Please encourage John Rowe to complete the series with his wonderful narrative style.
4 people found this helpful
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- not guilty
- 01-02-21
Monty python was correct - it’s impossible to sum up proust
There are few books I have read or listened to that I catch myself thinking I have learned as much about life and people. I find proust alternatively laugh out loud funny and beautiful. He makes me miss friends and family and old flames and love them all more the same. I find this narrator wonderfully soothing and dramatic without being overly so. The moment when proust highlights his own neurosis or poses himself a question and then answers, sublime.
2 people found this helpful
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- Janet A Henderson
- 18-03-20
John Rowe
John Rowe is an excellent narrator for the first two books of Remembrance of Time Past. So good that I cannot even listen to the subsequent books. Please Audible Publishing, produce the entire series with John Rowe.
2 people found this helpful
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- Tad Davis
- 04-09-19
Not for me
My first encounter with Proust was Simon Vance’s reading of Swann’s Way. It left me feeling grumpy and irritable. It certainly wasn’t the narration — Simon Vance can make a traffic report sound interesting. And it’s not John Rowe’s narration for this second volume either: he is equally charming and graceful. But he can’t overcome the aspects of Proust that I find so frustrating. The pattern of endless rumination and little overt action established in the first volume continues in this second one. If I had any sense of having something in common with these vapid people, I might not mind. But they bore me; they annoy me; they baffle me. I find myself wishing one of them would have a sudden attack of flatulence, just to liven things up a little.
At one point, I thought things were getting better: at last! the narrator has gone to a brothel! — but Proust managed to make even that potentially interesting development sound shallow and desiccated. Later, near the end of the book, the narrator develops a promising crush on a young woman named Albertine; but alas, she turns out to be either a mean-spirited tease or monumentally dense about the implications of her flirtatious remarks. (She invites him to a secret tryst at night in her hotel room, and then furiously rings the alarm when he tries to kiss her.)
It’s like having to sit through 25 hours of “My Dinner with André.” It’s full of sound and fury, signifying nothing — except that there’s no fury and very little sound.
Proust’s characters — certainly at least the narrator — are cursed with the same kind of morbid self-consciousness that afflicts the characters of Dostoevsky. There’s one crucial difference: in Dostoevsky, the anguish is existential and the consequences are life or death; in Proust, at least as far as the first two volumes are concerned, the anguish is a mild cough and the consequences are a hangnail. He seems not to notice that his characters are mostly buffoons, the narrator being the biggest buffoon of all.
What can you say about a young man who’s old enough to visit prostitutes, even to have a favorite one, and still cries himself to sleep when his grandmother doesn’t invite him to kiss her goodnight? (The same grandmother who exasperates him because.... she wants to get her photograph taken?) I can’t figure his age. Maybe my attention wandered when he mentioned that. At times he seems to be a young adult, but overall he has the emotional maturity of a pre-teen.
As I said in my comments on the first volume, people I know and and whose literary judgement I trust tell me I’m missing something. I accept that. So, Monsieur Proust, it’s not you, it’s me. I will read one more volume, if only to expose myself to yet another narrator (Neville Jason). But then I expect to call a halt to the proceedings. It seems clear at this point that I am not for Proust, and he is not for me.
7 people found this helpful
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- LMH
- 10-07-20
A beautiful reading of a beautiful novel
I have enjoyed volumes 1 & 2 of the series, narrated by John Rowe, so much. As a widow, dealing with grief, Proust's gentle introspection and observances on life have brought me a great deal of comforting perspective. These books have been perfect for easing into sleep at night; there are no great conflicts or agonizing dilemmas, just amazing insights on human nature, people and situations. He captures so accurately, in such detail, exactly how each stage of life felt and was experienced. This brought many long-forgotten moments of my own life back into focus for me. The narration is just sublime. Rowe reads as if he is just speaking directly from his own mind, you don't get a sense of the material being 'read' at all. He brings it to life. I felt as though I was listening to a friend speak of his life's remembrances. I'm terribly disappointed that the rest of the volumes in this series are not available in the voice of John Rowe! I was so looking forward to hearing the rest in his voice!
1 person found this helpful
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- A. Dionysia
- 14-03-18
So Proust!
Good for lovers of Proust and know how he writes. The narrator has the correctly sensitive voice. Beautifully written ending.
1 person found this helpful