<Li> The Prisoner (La Prisonnière, also translated as The Captive) (1923) is the first volume of the section within In Search of Lost Time known as "le Roman d'Albertine" ("the Albertine novel"). The name "Albertine" first appears in Proust's notebooks in 1913 . The material in volumes 5 and 6 were developed during the hiatus between the publication of volumes 1 and 2 and they are a departure of the original three - volume series originally planned by Proust . This is the first of Proust's books published posthumously . </Li> <Li> The Fugitive (Albertine disparue, also titled La Fugitive, sometimes translated as The Sweet Cheat Gone (last line of Walter de la Mare's poem "The Ghost") or Albertine Gone) (1925) is the second and final volume in "le Roman d'Albertine" and the second volume published after Proust's death . It is the most editorially vexed volume . As noted, the final three volumes of the novel were published posthumously, and without Proust's final corrections and revisions . The first edition, based on Proust's manuscript, was published as Albertine disparue to prevent it from being confused with Rabindranath Tagore's La Fugitive (1921). The first authoritative edition of the novel in French (1954), also based on Proust's manuscript, used the title La Fugitive . The second, even more authoritative French edition (1987--89) uses the title Albertine disparue and is based on an unmarked typescript acquired in 1962 by the Bibliothèque Nationale . To complicate matters, after the death in 1986 of Proust's niece, Suzy Mante - Proust, her son - in - law discovered among her papers a typescript that had been corrected and annotated by Proust . The late changes Proust made include a small, crucial detail and the deletion of approximately 150 pages . This version was published as Albertine disparue in France in 1987 . </Li> <Li> Finding Time Again (Le Temps retrouvé, also translated as Time Regained and The Past Recaptured) (1927) is the final volume in Proust's novel . Much of the final volume was written at the same time as Swann's Way, but was revised and expanded during the course of the novel's publication to account for, to a greater or lesser success, the then unforeseen material now contained in the middle volumes (Terdiman, 153n3). This volume includes a noteworthy episode describing Paris during the First World War . </Li> <P> The novel recounts the experiences of the Narrator (who is never definitively named) while he is growing up, learning about art, participating in society, and falling in love . </P>

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