Sodom and Gomorrah

Sodom and Gomorrah

In Search of Lost Time, Volume 4 (Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition)

About the Book

The fourth volume of one of the greatest novels of the twentieth century

John Sturrock's acclaimed new translation of Sodom and Gomorrah will introduce a new generation of American readers to the literary riches of Proust. The fourth volume in this superb edition of In Search of Lost Time—the first completely new translation of Proust's masterpiece since the 1920s—brings us a more comic and lucid prose than English readers have previously been able to enjoy.

Sodom and Gomorrah takes up the theme of homosexual love, male and female, and dwells on how destructive sexual jealousy can be for those who suffer it. Proust’s novel is also an unforgiving analysis of both the decadent high society of Paris and the rise of a philistine bourgeoisie that is on the way to supplanting it. Characters who had lesser roles in earlier volumes now reappear in a different light and take center stage, notably Albertine, with whom the narrator believes he is in love, and the insanely haughty Baron de Charlus.
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Praise for Sodom and Gomorrah

"John Sturrock is pitch-perfect in Sodom and Gomorrah, equally at home with its intimacies and its bitter comedy...poetic." —The Irish Times
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In Search of Lost Time Series

Finding Time Again
The Fugitive
The Prisoner
Sodom and Gomorrah
The Guermantes Way
In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flower
Swann's Way

About the Author

Marcel Proust
Marcel Proust was born in the Parisian suburb of Auteuil on July 10, 1871. He began work on In Search of Lost Time sometime around 1908, and the first volume, Swann’s Way, was published in 1913. In 1919 the second volume, Within a Budding Grove, won the Goncourt Prize, bringing Proust great and instantaneous fame. Two subsequent installments—The Guermantes Way (1920–21) and Sodom and Gomorrah (1921)—appeared in his lifetime. The remaining volumes were published following Proust’s death on November 18, 1922: The Captive in 1923, The Fugitive in 1925, and Time Regained in 1927. More by Marcel Proust
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About the Author

John Sturrock
John Sturrock is a writer and critic who has previously translated Victor Hugo, Stendhal, and Rimbaud. A consulting editor at the London Review of Books, he lives in West Sussex, England. More by John Sturrock
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About the Author

Christopher Prendergast
Christopher Prendergast is a professor emeritus in French and a Fellow of the British Academy. He has contribued to Adventures in Grammarland, In The Shadow of Young Girls in Flower: In Search of Lost Time, Mirages and Mad Beliefs: Proust the Skeptic, Septembers, and many more.  More by Christopher Prendergast
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About the Author

John Sturrock
John Sturrock is a writer and critic who has previously translated Victor Hugo, Stendhal, and Rimbaud. A consulting editor at the London Review of Books, he lives in West Sussex, England. More by John Sturrock
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About the Author

John Sturrock
John Sturrock is a writer and critic who has previously translated Victor Hugo, Stendhal, and Rimbaud. A consulting editor at the London Review of Books, he lives in West Sussex, England. More by John Sturrock
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