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Paperback Albert Camus's the Stranger Book

ISBN: 0812035437

ISBN13: 9780812035438

Albert Camus's the Stranger

A guide to reading "The Stranger" with a critical and appreciative mind encouraging analysis of plot, style, form, and structure. Also includes background on the author's life and times, sample tests,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

$32.39
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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Condemned for being honest

The darkness and simplicity of this wonderful book are frequently misunderstood. Many readers find Merseault cold and emotionless, but this is not the case. Merseault displays emotion in his argument with the prison priest, and (big surprise) his feelings toward his mother.Although he is put on trial for killing an Arab, Mersault is actually condemned for failing to grieve for his mother in public. Have any of you been to the funeral of an elderly realative? Sometimes, despite the emotions you feel for that person, the experience of the funeral is flat, meaningless and logical. All of the love came before the event and will come again many times later. But somehow a funeral leaves one dry and plain. Mersault experienced his mother's death for what it was: a dry and uncomfortable event. He did not put on a show for the people involved with the funeral or those who knew the deceased. His actions were plain and honest. But Merseault does have feelings for his mother. When he learns much later that she had a lover in the elderly home she occupied he feels glad for her. That moment of empathy if an extrordinary act of comppassion. It is also a private one."The Stranger" reveals many simple truths about the kind of people we are and it raises questions about the inegrity behind our thoughts and actions. It is a wonderful book whose value is easily overlooked by people who only put stock in a verbose work.

Meursault is no hero, but he is a martyr.

I picked up the book because I knew the author was an existentialist. When I read the book, I was shaken to my core; it was nearly as if I was looking into a mirror. Meursault is completely honest nearly all the time, is amiable enough, and accepts the absurdity and futility of life. That he is unmoved by the emotions that most people feel is not his fault, and that he will not fake them is to his credit; I am not so honest. When he (arguably) accidentally kills in a moment of panic, he becomes a victim of xenophobia, and is killed because he will not lie or pretend to have sensibilities that most people have the sense to fake. This book is depressing, I think, but this archetypical existentialist character has a lot to teach if one can understand his motivations--or lack thereof.Incidentally, I highly recommend _The Plague_ as a second course; I haven't finished it yet, but it appears to show another archtypical existentialist behaving in a more life-affirming way--which may help me and anyone else who finds the absurd tedium of life pointless and tiresome.

My favorite book of all time

A book about the "Absurd" hero... A man who can only enjoy the moment, with no thought of the future or the past, who does only what feels good at the moment... who is not ruled by the monotonous machinery of the world, who refuses to set routines... and yet becomes entangled in the impersonal machinery of society.By the way, this book is about as un-autobiographical as is possible for a book to be. Yes, Camus grew up in Algiers and loved to swim, but he was primarily a thinker; he was utterly incapable of turning off his mind and thinking everything through. He philosophy was completely opposed to the Meursault's view of life. Yet, like me, he found in Meursault a certain honesty, of living consistently, without faking emotions and conventions. But it was ultimately against Meursault's attitude that Camus fought in his books and essays. It is a philosophical novel, and no doubt people will be turned off by anything that challenges them, but definitely give this book a chance. It has more to say than all but a handful of books five times the length of this one. I read it almost ten years ago for school, and have read it a half dozen times since, as well as every other novel Camus wrote... those for my own enjoyment. Put aside that King book for a week and read one of the greatest books ever written.

Great book

I had to do a paper on this book in which I researched Albert Camus. He wrote this book as an autobiography. The protagonist felt and acted as Camus would have, and ultimately showed Camus that he needed to change. There is nothing wrong with Mersault - he is just living life for his own enjoyment. Why should he care about god? A splendid book.

One of my favorite stories!

This is one of my favorite books. I first read it in high school and fell in love with it. Mersault (the main character) finds himself guilty of murdering an Arab. The book soon reveals it is his lack of involvement in society that stands trial. I strongly recomend this books for those that are interested in existentialism.
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