Since his parents passed away when he was a young child, Paul has been reared in Paris by his two eccentric aunts, who have been described as "smothering" him. Paul is a loving man-child. Even though he is now thirty-three years old, he still does not talk. Only one goal exists in the minds of Paul's aunts for their nephew: for him to triumph in piano competitions. Even though Paul diligently practices, he does not have fulfillment in his life until he agrees to his upstairs neighbor's suggestions for improvement. Madame Proust, who was appropriately named after the author, provides Paul with a mixture that reawakens the most delicious of his fantasies and frees repressed memories from his youth.
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Since his parents passed away when he was a young child, Paul has been reared in Paris by his two eccentric aunts, who have been described as "smothering" him. Paul is a loving man-child. Even though he is now thirty-three years old, he still does not talk. Only one goal exists in the minds of Paul's aunts for their nephew: for him to triumph in piano competitions. Even though Paul diligently practices, he does not have fulfillment in his life until he agrees to his upstairs neighbor's suggestions for improvement. Madame Proust, who was appropriately named after the author, provides Paul with a mixture that reawakens the most delicious of his fantasies and frees repressed memories from his youth.
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