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Stranger [Audiobook] [Audio CD]

Albert Camus
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (120 customer reviews)
RRP: £15.02
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Product details

  • Audio CD
  • Publisher: Recorded Books (1 May 2005)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1419345354
  • ISBN-13: 978-1419337314
  • ASIN: 1419337319
  • Product Dimensions: 14.5 x 13.5 x 1.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (120 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 940,718 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Product Description

Product Description

Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly expensive. Hesperides Press are republishing these classic works in affordable, high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Book Description

Patrick McCarthy places The Stranger in the context of a French and French-Algerian history and culture, examines the way the work undermines traditional concepts of fiction, and explores the parallels (and more importantly the contrasts) between Camus and Sartre. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
72 of 84 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
I have never felt the need to comment on reviews posted by others on this site, but I feel that Ted Rushton's review of The Stranger is a disgrace and I am amazed that Amazon have seen fit to publish his offensive and ill-informed half-witted drivel. Anyone who can use the moronic term "surrender monkeys" in a review of a book should confine themselves to the latest piece of trash by Frederick Forsyth and steer clear of authors of the calibre of Camus, whose ideas are clearly beyond him.

Even if Mersault could be seen as exemplifying the attitudes of the French people - and he clearly exemplifies nothing of the sort - Mr Rushton's anti-French tirade crumbles when you consider some facts he omits to mention. Firstly, Camus himself was active in the resistance during the war and also edited, at considerable risk, the clandestine journal Combat. Secondly Camus' The Plague is an allegory of occupation and resistance and, despite Mr Rushton's assertions to the contrary, exhibits considerable moral bravery. Then he should consider Sartre's Roads to Freedom trilogy, three books which concern themselves unflinchingly with issues of engagement, commitment and resistance.

In any case what philosophy could be more brave than existentialism, a philosophy that rejects the safety net of God and all other transcendental metaphysical fairy tales and insists that man is morally responsible for his own actions and the consequences thereof?

And by the way, as an Englishman who has travelled in France I can assure Mr R that the French do not hate the English and we - apart from a few tabliod reading idiots - do not hate them either.

The Stranger itself is one of the great books of the 20th Century: a masterful study of a man who refuses to conform to the false values and hypocrisy of mass self-assured organised society and ultimately pays the consequences for his bravery in refusing to "fit in". The court room scene is one of the finest pieces of writing you will ever come across, and the book as a whole is beautifully written, intensely moving, and ultimately uplifting.

Buy the book and ignore Mr Rushton's vile "review"

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31 of 36 people found the following review helpful
By Daniel Jolley HALL OF FAME TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
The Stranger is a haunting, challenging masterpiece of literature. While it is fiction, it actually manages to express the complex concepts and themes of existential philosophy better than the movement's most noted philosophical writings and almost as well as Dostoyevsky's Notes From the Underground. This is a new kind of literature. The story in and of itself is rather simple, but the glimpses into the intellect and feelings of the protagonist are the sources of the magic of this novel. M.Meursault is a normal man in Algiers, France. When we meet him, he is on the way to his mother's funeral, where he says very little, expresses no remorse over her death, and immediately returns home. The next day, he goes swimming, meets Marie, takes her to see a comedy that night, and spends the next few weeks living his normal life and occassionally seeing Marie. He ends up getting indirectly involved in a dispute between his neighbor Raymond and a girl who did him wrong, and the conflict culminates in an encounter on the beach between Raymond, Meursault, and the girl's Arab brother and friend. Raymond is cut with a knife, but the whole episode seems to be resolved. Meursault, though, decides later to take another walk on the beach because he is too worn out to go inside and rejoin his friends, and somewhat inexplicably he ends up killing one of the Arabs. The second half of the novel examines Meursault's thoughts in relation to his trial and sentence; interestingly, he is prosecuted as much if not more for his moral character than for the crime of murder itself.

Basically, Meursault does not care about anything, does not feel anything for anyone (including himself, for the most part). He looks at life objectively and determines that it really doesn't matter whether he does something or not in the overall scheme of things. When Marie expresses her love for him, he tells her he will marry her if it will make her happy but that he cannot say he really loves her. He expresses no remorse for killing the Arab because it just happened; he had no intention of doing it, but the fact is that he did, so there's little point in dwelling on it. He cares about the present and, to a lesser degree, the future, but the past is meaningless for the very reason that it is the past. Meursault sees things as they are; rather than rely on flights of fantasy and imagination (the typical tools of the Romanticists), he deals with facts in the here and now rather than run from them and has no problem admitting the seemingly obvious fact that man is a creature of utter depravity. He rejects religion; since each man must eventually die, what does it matter what he does while on earth. It is a man's hopes and dreams that weigh down his very existence; Marsault can only find happiness by cleansing himself of all such illusory notions.

Needless to say, this is not an uplifting book, but it is an engaging, thought-provoking one. While Camus cannot be called a true existentialist in his own philosophical outlook, his fiction does epitomize many existentialist ideas. Marsault is a protagonist like no other in literature--you cannot like him, he is obviously guilty of killing a man in cold blood, and he is of a cold-hearted nature, yet you do understand some of his thinking, find yourself more and more interested in his dark outlook on life, and have to admit that much of what he believes makes sense.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
This book is very easy to read, but very hard to read well. It was amazing!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Interesting and puzzling
"The Stranger" is a deep yet odd sort of novel.

For a start, the main plotline does not really establish itself until halfway through. Read more
Published 3 months ago by LG
Thought provoking
The Stranger is a story of an 'ordinary' man and the justice system.

This book does not 'guide' you through like a 12 year old, you must read between the lines and... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Darkwinter
Possibly The Best Book Ever Written
Possibly the best book ever written! After reading for the first time I went straight back to the beginning and reread it TWICE. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Nicholas
Pied Noir Murderer is now an "Existentialist"
"Existentialist" rubbish that I was obliged to study for a French "A" level. Feeling a bit alienated? Shoot someone at random - it's a hot day. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Baraniecki Mark Stuart
Not what I expected
I was expecting the actual book, not the academic notes of the book. I don't think this was mentioned in the book description which seems very disingenuous.
Published on 22 Jun 2009 by Daniel J. Bailey
First masterpiece from Albert Camus; L'Étranger (1942)
The Outsider was first published in Paris in 1942 and would cement it's author's reputation as one of the most intelligent and imaginative writers of the 20th century. Read more
Published on 27 Feb 2008 by Jonathan James Romley
Don't get me wrong, great book and all, but...
Reviews of this novel tend to be split between thoughtful people who think it's a masterpiece about man's destiny and the indifference of society to human suffering, arguably less... Read more
Published on 22 Feb 2007 by lexo1941
Classic
A classic book by French standards - not sure what a previous reviewer means by American standards. Specific nationality is not the point here - Mersault could just have well been... Read more
Published on 18 July 2006 by Peter Short
Beware
This is the same story but I believe a different translation of "The Outsider" by Albert Camus.
Published on 31 Aug 2004 by "harveycamm"
Essential
Of course it is only really essential reading if you can relate to Mersault, I can, and I suppose the very people that punish Mersault in the book are the ones who cant relate to... Read more
Published on 3 Jan 2004
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