I've seen several reviews of the Swann's Way audiobook by readers who were introduced to Proust through Heuet's comic, and Goldhammer argues that one of the principal audiences of this graphic novel is people who are too intimidated by Proust to read In Search of Lost Time in its original or translated form. Well, guess what? Even the graphic novel is intimidating. It's huge, to begin with, and I read it for an hour, only to get a mere 50 pages into it. The artwork is classic ligne claire, stunning and a triumph. Heuet does things only the discerning reader or fellow artist would appreciate, like staggering panels by mere millimeters, so that the reader knows which way to read without thinking.
Anyway, what Heuet has done is create a gift to all fans of Proust. Of course, it cannot be a perfect adaptation without being thousands of pages long. And who would read it then? The length is excellent in my view, a solid four-hour read (compared to 15 to 20 hours for the prose book), at just over 200 full-sized pages. It has a lot of text for a graphic novel, a LOT of text. I would compare it to one of my favorite novel adaptations, Ringworld: The Graphic Novel. The adaptation of Ringworld is six or seven hundred pages in two manga-sized volumes. That adaptation, on the other hand, tries to include everything that is in the book, nearly, at the expense of color. Swann's Way: The Graphic Novel is lavishly colored, as seen in the attached photographs.
No comments:
Post a Comment