Victor Brombert
Trains of Thought
Memories of a Stateless Youth
"A beautifully cadenced work of artit will remind some readers of Nabokov's classic Speak, Memory."Joyce Carol Oates
Paris in the 1930smelancholy, erotic, intensely politicizedprovides
the poetic beginning for this remarkable autobiography by one of America's
most renowned literary scholars. In Trains of Thought Victor Brombert
recaptures the story of his youth in a Proustian reverie, recalling, with a
rare combination of humor and tenderness, his childhood in France, his family's
escape to America during the Vichy regime, his experiences in the U.S. Army
from the invasion of Normandy to the occupation of Berlin, and his discovery
of his scholarly vocation.
In shimmering prose, Brombert evokes his upbringing in Paris's upper-middle-class
16th arrondissement, a world where "the sweetness of things" masked the
class tensions and political troubles that threatened the stability of the
French democracy. Using the train as a metaphor to describe his personal
journey, Brombert recalls his boyhood enchantment with railway traveleven
imagining that he had been conceived on a sleeper. But the young Brombert
sensed that "the poetry of the railroad also had its darker side, for there
was the turmoil of departures, the terror . . . of being pursued by a gigantic
locomotive, the nightmare of derailments, or of being trapped in a tunnel."
With time, Brombert became acutely aware of the grimmer aspects of life
around himthe death of his sister, Nora, on an operating table, the
tragic disappearance of his boyhood love, Dany, with her infant child, and
the mounting cries of "Sale Juif," or "dirty Jew," that grew from a whisper
into a thundering din as the decade drew to a close.
The invasion of May 1940 dispelled the optimistic belief, shared by most of
the French nation, that the horrors that had descended on Germany could
never happen to them. The family was forced to flee from Paris, first to
Nice, then to Spain, and finally across the Atlantic on a banana freighter
to America.
Discovering the excitement of New York, Brombert nonetheless hoped to return
to France in an American uniform once the United States entered the war.
He joined the U.S. Army in 1943, and soon found himself with General Patton's
old "Hell-on-Wheels" division at Omaha Beach, then in Paris at the time of
its liberation, and later at the Battle of the Bulge. The final chapter
concludes with Brombert's return to America, his enrollment at Yale University,
and the beginning of a literary voyage whose origins are poignantly captured
in this coming-of-age story.
Trains of Thought is a virtuosic accomplishment, and a memoir that is
likely to become a classic account of both memory and experience.
"A haunting, Proustian study of memory, Trains of Thought describes a
lost world without nostalgia or sentiment, but with a tenderness of its
own." Adam Gopnik, author of Paris to the Moon
"Brombert folds the social, political, and cultural history of the decade
19351945 into a vivid personal memoir of how he escaped from Europe in
1941 only to return as an American soldier. A great kaleidoscope of a
story." Roger Shattuck
"It just isn't possible to resist a memoirist who admits to having
plagiarized Musset as a French fourteen-year-old in love. Especially when he
turns up five years later on Omaha Beach, as a U.S. master sergeant with a
foreign accent. A tender and honest account of a particular brand of
childhood, longer-lost than most, expertly reconstructed in all its
sun-dappled splendor." Stacy Schiff, author of the Pulitzer
Prizewinning Véra
Victor Brombert is the Henry Putnam University Professor of Romance
and Comparative Literatures Emeritus at Princeton University and has served
as chairman of its Council of Humanities. The author of eleven works of
criticism, he lives in Princeton with his wife, Beth Archer.
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