In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flower is Proust's spectacular
dissection of male and female adolescence, charged with the narrator's
memories of Paris and the Normandy seaside. At the heart of the story
lie his relationships with his grandmother and with the Swann family. As
a meditation on different forms of love, In the Shadow of Young Girls in
Flower has no equal. Here, Proust introduces some of his greatest comic
inventions, from the magnificently dull M. de Norpois to the enchanting
Robert de Saint-Loup. It is memorable as well for the first appearance
of the two figures who for better or worse are to dominate the
narrator's life - the Baron de Charlus and the mysterious Albertine.
First published in 1919, Within a Budding Grove was awarded the Prix
Goncourt, bringing the author immediate fame. In this second volume of
In Search of Lost Time, the narrator turns from the childhood
reminiscences of Swann's Way to memories of his adolescence. Having
gradually become indifferent to Swann's daughter Gilberte, the narrator
visits the seaside resort of Balbec with his grandmother and meets a new
object of attention - Albertine, "a girl with brilliant, laughing eyes
and plump, matt cheeks."