Article 1X2AZ The odd pleasures of reading Proust on a mobile phone

The odd pleasures of reading Proust on a mobile phone

by
Mark Frauenfelder
from on (#1X2AZ)

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Author Clive Thompson once wrote an essay about the experience of reading War and Peace on his iPhone. On his blog, he writes about how Sarah Boxer read Proust's i la recherche du temps perdu, all 1.2-million words.

From Boxer's essay:

Soon you will see that the smallness of your cellphone (my screen was about two by three inches) and the length of Proust's sentences are not the shocking mismatch you might think. Your cellphone screen is like a tiny glass-bottomed boat moving slowly over a vast and glowing ocean of words in the night. There is no shore. There is nothing beyond the words in front of you. It's a voyage for one in the nighttime. Pure romance.

In a curious way, I think reading Proust on your cellphone brings out the fathomless something in the novel that Shattuck calls "the most oceanic-and the least read" of 20th-century classics. It makes you feel like Jules Verne's Captain Nemo in his submarine, which is just right.

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