A magical first novel by a talented young French author recreates Proust's upper-middle-class Paris during WWI. Few established novelists would dare to write a novel in which Proust appears as a character. Fewer still would have the nerve to invent love letters written by Proust to a 16-year-old boy. For a first novelist to set himself this challenge and succeed is remarkable. Paris 1916. Vincent is 16 and approaching manhood very much "in the absence of men" with every able-bodied young man away at the front. In his relationship with the soldier-son of one of his parent's servants, he explores his sexuality. His platonic relationship with the middle-aged Jewish writer Marcel Proust stimulates an intelligence and sophistication remarkable in an adolescent.
With both he enters a world of love, both erotic and platonic. The book is as remarkable an act of homage to a great writer as Jean Rhys'Wide Sargasso Seaswas to Charlotte Bronte.