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French writer who loved his madeleines
Answer for the clue "French writer who loved his madeleines ", 6 letters:
proust
Alternative clues for the word proust
Word definitions for proust in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Samuel Beckett 's essay Proust , from 1930, is an aesthetic and epistemological manifesto, which is more concerned with Beckett's influences and preoccupations than with its ostensible subject .
Usage examples of proust.
Orphu had downloaded the French language in all of its classic intricacies along with the novel and biographical information on Proust, but Mahnmut ended up reading the book in five English translations because English was the lost language he had concentrated his own studies in over the past e-century and a half and he felt more comfortable judging literature in it.
For Marcel Proust, whose fifteen-volume A la Recherche du Temps Perdu is a long-drawn-out struggle to recall and thus to transcend a painful past, the trigger which evokes the entire history is the taste of a madeleine cake.
The Chargé was a droll, well-to-do Bostonian who had spent a lifetime reading Proust and playing croquet.
This analysis of the mental process had an important influence on many twentieth-century writers, especially Marcel Proust and James Joyce, who both developed further the technique known as interior monologue or stream of consciousness.
ROBERT PROUST retrieved the letters from his private post box at the Capucines Station and rushed back to the privacy of his apartment.
Just think, I could be at my house with a nice glass of Viognier in front of a blazing fire reading Proust instead of skipping merrily through the environs of Bowlington, North Carolina, while dodging police choppers.