The Fugitive
Remembrance of Things Past, Volume 6
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Narrated by:
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Neville Jason
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By:
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Marcel Proust
About this listen
Remembrance of Things Past is one of the monuments of 20th-century literature. Neville Jason’s unabridged recording of the work runs to 150 hours. Marcel's obsessive feelings of possession for Albertine have forced her to flee. It comes as a terrible shock and is followed by further destabilizing news about other friends.
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A good story ruined by the narrator
- By i. Ski on 04-17-14
By: Anne Brontë
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Dangerous Liaisons
- By: Pierre-Ambroise-François Choderlos de Laclos
- Narrated by: Gabriel Woolf
- Length: 15 hrs and 34 mins
- Unabridged
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The story, composed entirely of letters written by the various characters to each other, tells of the Marquise de Merteuil and the Vicomte de Valmont, two rivals who use sex as a weapon to humiliate and degrade others, uncaring of those who face social ruin or whose hearts are broken. It depicts a decadent and corrupt aristocracy exposing the perversions of the so-called Ancien Regime. The relevance of this grew due to the ensuing the French Revolution.
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Amazing story.
- By Steve Inman on 11-10-09
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He Knew He Was Right
- By: Anthony Trollope
- Narrated by: Nigel Patterson
- Length: 30 hrs and 32 mins
- Unabridged
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When Louis Trevelyan's young wife meets an old family acquaintance, his unreasonable jealousy of their friendship sparks a quarrel that leads to a brutal and tragic estrangement.
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Nigel Patterson as the narrator is great
- By NH on 10-31-16
By: Anthony Trollope
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The Idiot
- By: Fyodor Dostoevsky
- Narrated by: Alastair Cameron
- Length: 23 hrs and 32 mins
- Unabridged
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Young Prince Mishkin is that rare thing - a "completely beautiful human being". He is honest, humble, generous, and selfless, but unfortunately these traits mean he is often mistaken for an idiot. Upon his return to St. Petersburg, after being away at a Swiss sanatorium for the treatment of epilepsy, Prince Mishkin is taken under the wing of the wife of General Yepanchin, who arranges for him to live with the family of her money-obsessed friend Ganya.
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wow.
- By Michal Krawczyk on 04-25-17
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The Confessions
- By: Jean-Jacques Rousseau
- Narrated by: Frederick Davidson
- Length: 30 hrs
- Unabridged
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Dr. Johnson may have been correct in saying that “Rousseau was a very bad man,” but none can argue that his ideas are among the most influential in all of world history. It was Rousseau, the father of the romantic movement, who was responsible for introducing at least two modern day thoughts that pervade academia. The Confessions is Rousseau’s landmark autobiography. Both brilliant and flawed, it is nonetheless beautifully written and remains one of the most moving human documents in all of literature.
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Extraordinary in its ordinariness...
- By Varni-Maree on 08-28-12
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Immortality
- By: Milan Kundera
- Narrated by: Richmond Hoxie
- Length: 11 hrs and 54 mins
- Unabridged
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Milan Kundera's sixth novel springs from a casual gesture of a woman to her swimming instructor, a gesture that creates a character in the mind of a writer named Kundera. Like Flaubert's Emma or Tolstoy's Anna, Kundera's Agnes becomes an object of fascination, of indefinable longing. From that character springs a novel, a gesture of the imagination that both embodies and articulates Milan Kundera's supreme mastery of the novel and its purpose: to explore thoroughly the great themes of existence.
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Cerebral Crosswinds in Parisian fields
- By W Perry Hall on 01-13-14
By: Milan Kundera
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The Birthmark
- By: Nathaniel Hawthorne
- Narrated by: Walter Covell
- Length: 42 mins
- Unabridged
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Hawthorne approached the Romantic notion of the ability of science to destroy art (or beauty) in the form of fictive "horror stories" of biological research out of control. This story is the best of that group. A devoted scientist marries a beautiful woman with a single physical flaw: a birthmark on her face. Aylmer becomes obsessed with the imperfection and his attempts to remove it via his scientific skills, thus rendering his bride perfect.
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Bland uninspired
- By Holcomb on 10-02-12
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The Belton Estate
- By: Anthony Trollope
- Narrated by: Flo Gibson
- Length: 14 hrs and 14 mins
- Unabridged
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Charming, loving Clara Amedroz is involved with two suitors. How she deals with this dilemma is full of humor and very moving.
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Claire's Two Lovers
- By Joseph R on 08-27-09
By: Anthony Trollope
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David Copperfield
- By: Charles Dickens
- Narrated by: Richard Armitage
- Length: 36 hrs and 30 mins
- Unabridged
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Between his work on the 2014 Audible Audiobook of the Year, Hamlet, Prince of Denmark: A Novel, and his performance of Classic Love Poems, narrator Richard Armitage ( The Hobbit, Hannibal) has quickly become a listener favorite. Now, in this defining performance of Charles Dickens' classic David Copperfield, Armitage lends his unique voice and interpretation, truly inhabiting each character and bringing real energy to the life of one of Dickens' most famous characters.
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A PERFECT narration of an English classic!
- By Wayne on 09-03-17
By: Charles Dickens
What listeners say about The Fugitive
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Luvin Cocktails
- 03-10-23
Building toward the final installment
This is Proust at his best as he begins tying together all of the threads of his mega novel going into the final volume. Well read by Neville Jason.
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- Massha
- 03-13-24
great novel stupid guy
This is a hreat great piece of literature but oh LORD, how much you want to rush this terrible fool and beat him up with a stick!
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- Darwin8u
- 10-31-13
A River of Proustian Memory and Time
I started listening to Proust and it feels again like I've submerged into a slow-moving prose river. The water is clean, with gradual bends, but sometimes filled with small boiling eddies, swirls, and reverses. Time and memory move in one direction, but the current of Proustian memory contains an involuntary universe of vortexes and wakes. We fall in and out of love. Our memory of our love becomes bent and refracted as we move away from those we once loved.
Seriously, every time I read/listen to Proust I finish thinking he could write a whole novel about one small spot on a random river. An exposed rock or boulder that cuts the flow of the river into two halves could occupy 100 pages as Proust described the nuance of the water around and against the rock. He would obviously need to describe the varying temperature of the water and the way the light moves through the textured leaves of the green forest's canopy. How evening's light danced its crepuscular silhouettes against the reflections of dusk on the churning ripples of a slowly moving river.
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19 people found this helpful
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- John Cullom
- 04-28-23
Weakest volume
I guess. This is very tell don’t show. Mostly gossip about what happened rather than realistic behavior. Marcel wasn’t there for the events, so we would lose the POV if we got the scenes, but mp solved that for Charlus. I don’t find Albertine to be a convincing character at all in this volume, and it makes this one painful, because little of the material resonates. I guess we all know that it’s because Albertine isn’t Albertine, but it tries the patience. I prefer the previous volume over this one. Looking forward to a spectacular conclusion.
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- SandyK
- 07-11-22
Perhaps the Most Cohesive of Them All
I know of no rating that fits these segments of In Remembrance of Things Past better than 5 stars (that is, unless you would allow me to award 6!)
It is such a treat to read/listen to this most extraordinary literature. I simply can’t believe I haven’t done so until now.
The Fugitive is largely about the relationship of Marcel and Albertine. I won’t say more because I don’t want to give away the story. But, suffice to say, it’s brilliant and well told. And, I would add, the title of this installment tells a lot about the course of the story, as to both characters. Again, I’ll say nothing more, save that this Part 6 is, I think, the most cohesive of them all.
I would add that we see here a culmination of many subplots and the course of affairs for many of the main characters as they become “fugitives” of their earlier lives.
The language, the vocabulary, the characterizations, the perceptions, the weaving together of memories - all that Proust does so well continue in the finest fashion.
Neville Jason has created a remarkable thing of beauty in his narration.
PLEASE know that this series of In Remembrance is so very fine and is well worth your attention and experience.
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2 people found this helpful