Overture
A writer turns to Proust while waiting for the results of a prostate exam. With David R. Slavitt's signature erudition, the story ranges from Dr. Édouard Brissaud, Proust's model for Dr. du Boulbon in The Guermantes Way to skin conditions to stray dogs to lost souls.
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Fiction. While waiting for results from a prostate exam, a writer turns to the example of Marcel Proust and Dr. Éduoard Brissaud, Proust's model for Dr. duBulbon in The Guermantes Way and the man who first documented Gilles de la Tourette's Syndrome. With the Frenchmen in his head and his diagnosis hovering, the writer grapples with the proper response to mortality, considering dogs as a metaphor for wandering souls, the scratch of a pen and its connection to eczema, and the contrast between his mother's murder and his own uncertain future. As Slavitt writes, "The mind is not where the real business of our lives is transacted, but somewhere else, in the recesses of the body."
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