Since 1922, almost all English-language readers have encountered Marcel Proust by way of the translator C. K. Scott Moncrieff, who wrestled with Proust's seven-volume masterpiece—published as Remembrance of Things Past—until his death in 1930. Yet little was known about him—publicly a debonair man...
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TITLEKIND
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02.19.15Soldier, Spy, Translator: The Life of C.K. Scott MoncrieffOn Writers
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03.25.15The Supernatural Grace of Flannery O’ConnorOn Writers
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04.03.15In Praise of Charles WrightOn Writers
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04.09.15Interstellar Poetry: Derek Walcott and Star TrekOn Writers
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04.16.15On Frank BidartOn Writers
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04.23.15An Ode to the CaptainOn Writers
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05.14.15His EnglishOn Writers
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08.06.15The Last Love SongOn Writers
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08.13.15The World in Perpetual MotionOn Writers
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11.06.15The Invention of Kurt VonnegutOn Writers
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12.11.15FSG’s Favorite Books of 2015On Writers
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04.11.16The Uses and Abuses of CriticismOn Writers
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04.20.16Ange Mlinko’s Cabinet of CuriositiesOn Writers
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04.27.16Leviathan in the Sun: Les MurrayOn Writers
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04.28.16This Defiant Edifice: On Marianne Moore’s “The Fish”On Writers
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08.18.16Build the Road as We TravelOn Writers
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09.01.16A Voice in the DesertOn Writers
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12.22.16Shirley Hazzard and FSGOn Writers
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02.16.17Keep Moving Toward the SeaOn Writers
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03.09.17Carrèrisms, Carrèrists, CarrèreOn Writers