Notebooks 1942–1951
Book by Albert Camus
Notebooks 1942–1951 is a book by Albert Camus, published by Knopf in 1965. The book was published after the death of the Nobel awarded author, who died in 1960. The book contains the notes of Camus for the period 1942 to 1951. 2 more volumes of Camus notes were also published (Notebooks 1935–1942 and Notebooks 1951–1959). Notebooks provides an insight to Camus thought at the time he was creating the Rebel, The Plague and the Misunderstanding.[1][2]
References
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Albert Camus (works)
- The Stranger
- The Plague
- The Fall
- A Happy Death
- The First Man
- Exile and the Kingdom
- "The Adulterous Woman"
- "The Renegade"
- "The Silent Men"
- "The Guest"
- "The Artist at Work"
- "The Growing Stone"
- Caligula
- The Misunderstanding
- The State of Siege
- The Just Assassins
- The Possessed
- Requiem for a Nun
- Christian Metaphysics and Neoplatonism
- Betwixt and Between
- Neither Victims nor Executioners
- Notebooks 1935–1942
- Notebooks 1942–1951
- Notebooks 1951–1959
- Nuptials
- Correspondance (1944-1959)
- Algerian Chronicles
- American Journals
- Francine Faure (second wife)
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