Ray MacKenzie (@rnmackenzie_ray) 's Twitter Profile
Ray MacKenzie

@rnmackenzie_ray

Lliterature professor, translator, obsessive moviegoer.

ID: 2295059984

calendar_today16-01-2014 21:46:46

1,1K Tweet

216 Followers

519 Following

Doug Armato (@noctambulate) 's Twitter Profile Photo

My advance copy of Ray MacKenzie’s (⁦Ray MacKenzie⁩) sparkling new translation of Flaubert’s SENTIMENTAL EDUCATION sits temptingly at the edge of my desk . . .

My advance copy of Ray MacKenzie’s (⁦<a href="/rnmackenzie_ray/">Ray MacKenzie</a>⁩) sparkling new translation of Flaubert’s SENTIMENTAL EDUCATION sits temptingly at the edge of my desk . . .
Doug Armato (@noctambulate) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“Paris in its entirety existed only in relation to her, and the great city with all its voices, its rustling, was like an immense orchestra around her.” Starting Ray Mackenzie’s luminous new translation of Flaubert’s great portrait of youthful infatuation SENTIMENTAL EDUCATION

“Paris in its entirety existed only in relation to her, and the great city with all its voices, its rustling, was like an immense orchestra around her.” Starting Ray Mackenzie’s luminous new translation of Flaubert’s great portrait of youthful infatuation SENTIMENTAL EDUCATION
Wiseblood Books (@wisebloodbooks) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Many thanks to The Hedgehog Review for making room for my double review of The Letters of Gustave Flaubert and Ray MacKenzie 's new translation of Sentimental Education in the print "Missing Character" issue. Here's a peak.

Many thanks to <a href="/hedgehogreview/">The Hedgehog Review</a> for making room for my double review of The Letters of Gustave Flaubert and <a href="/rnmackenzie_ray/">Ray MacKenzie</a> 's new translation of Sentimental Education in the print "Missing Character" issue. Here's a peak.
Wiseblood Books (@wisebloodbooks) 's Twitter Profile Photo

My double review of The Letters of Gustave Flaubert and Ray MacKenzie 's new translation of Sentimental Education, originally published in the print edition of the The Hedgehog Review 's "Missing Character" issue, is now available online in full: hedgehogreview.com/issues/missing…

The TLS (@thetls) 's Twitter Profile Photo

'The subtlety and rigour that Flaubert paid to composition makes translating him a daunting task.' Aaron Peck: Sentimental Education was a misunderstood classic the-tls.co.uk/literature-by-…

U of MN Press (@uminnpress) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Flaubert's SENTIMENTAL EDUCATION "has an incredible ending. It’s bleak, but also incredibly funny, and I’ll never forget it." —Rachel Kushner, in ELLE Magazine (US) elle.com/culture/books/…

London Review of Books (@lrb) 's Twitter Profile Photo

‘Flaubert, like Kafka, thinks or knows that the human world is ridiculous or monstrous. Sometimes he is angry about this, but more often the writing suggests a complicated sympathy.’ Michael Wood on Flaubert’s ‘Sentimental Education’: lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/…

London Review of Books (@lrb) 's Twitter Profile Photo

‘Balzac’s environment par excellence is Paris. He documents the hotels, tenements and streets that later regimes would sweep away, and his work serves as a kind of history of the city.’ Raymond N. MacKenzie, in the new issue: lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v47/…

London Review of Books (@lrb) 's Twitter Profile Photo

‘The working classes are underrepresented in his books, and Balzac was not particularly interested in them. Perhaps he didn’t think they were corrupt enough.’ Raymond N. MacKenzie on Balzac’s Paris: lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v47/…

Wiseblood Books (@wisebloodbooks) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Immensely grateful that my essay Proust's Sacramental Sacrifice is now published in LOGOS. An extended version of the essay will appear in More than a Matter of Taste: The Moral Imagination and the Spirit of Literature (due out in early 2026 through Word on Fire). Here's an

Immensely grateful that my essay Proust's Sacramental Sacrifice is now published in LOGOS. An extended version of the essay will appear in More than a Matter of Taste: The Moral Imagination and the Spirit of Literature (due out in early 2026 through Word on Fire). Here's an
Wessie du Toit (@wessiedutoit) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The practice of reading is in steep decline, and those of us who still do it could soon be a tiny minority. But this simply marks a return to the historical norm – and not necessarily a terrible thing for literature itself. My essay for First Things: firstthings.com/the-future-of-…

Tyson 🇺🇦 (@eliotsbutler) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Just as I’d expected, Stendhal is a master. Thank you Ray MacKenzie for translating Le rouge et le noire. You’re now one of my top favorite translators.

Just as I’d expected, Stendhal is a master. Thank you <a href="/rnmackenzie_ray/">Ray MacKenzie</a> for translating Le rouge et le noire. You’re now one of my top favorite translators.
Yoon Kim (@nicoscosc) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“And of the many experiences, the happiest is reading. Ah, there is something far better than reading, and that is rereading…” — Borges at eighty