June 01, 2015

Review: The Stranger by Albert Camus


Title: The Stranger
Author: Albert Camus
Translated by: Stuart Gilbert (French to British)
Publication: Vintage Books
Genre: Thriller, Literary Fiction
Pages: 96
Source: Kindle edition
Rating: 5/5

Few writers don’t just write, but create the whole new world for their readers. They phrase many questions in reader’s mind with their outstanding works. Although it is my first read of Albert Camus but it touched me to the core and more than a thriller it is great way to know the limits, a writer can think. Albert Camus was an Algerian-Born French Nobel prize winning author and philosopher of 20th century.


The story starts with “MOTHER died today. Or, maybe, yesterday; I can't be sure.” and with his first line author captured you immensely in his journey. It is a story of Mersault, a young man who commits a crime, in a heat-dazed moment he shot an Arab and condemned to death.

Here author’s narrative skills played a fabulous role by giving a unpredictable turn to the story. When court just ignored the matter of fact why this murder kind of thing happened but they seemed more curious about ‘his unkindness towards her mother. ‘He was being judged for his real character that he has no opinion about anything, why he doesn’t feel much.

By his brilliantly told philosophical work, Albert Camus unintentionally gives you the power to read between the lines. There are more characters in the book as her mother’s friends at her funeral, Mersault’s girl, few so-called- friends.  There are places in this book where you will find a very well known stranger, living with a mournful solace.

The lines which makes you think more about the protagonist‘s character..

I tried to picture a moment when the beating of my heart no longer echoed in my head.
So, what with long bouts of sleep, my memories, readings of that scrap of newspaper, the tides of light and darkness, the days slipped by. I'd read, of course, that in jail one ends up by losing track of time. But this had never meant anything definite to me. I hadn't grasped how days could be at once long and short. Long, no doubt, as periods to live through, but so distended that they ended up by overlapping on each other. In fact, I never thought of days as such; only the words "yesterday" and "tomorrow" still kept some meaning.

The sun was setting and it was the hour of which I'd rather not speak—"the nameless hour," I called it—when evening sounds were creeping up from all the floors of the prison in a sort of stealthy procession. I went to the barred window and in the last rays looked once again at my reflected face. It was as serious as before; and that wasn't surprising, as just then I was feeling serious. But, at the same time, I heard something that I hadn't heard for months. It was the sound of a voice; my own voice, there was no mistaking it. And I recognized it as the voice that for many a day of late had been sounding in my ears. So I knew that all this time I'd been talking to myself.


If you want to know about your existence and the essence of life, Highly Recommended, an enigmatic work of Albert Camus!

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