Notebooks 1951–1959
Notebooks 1951–1959 is the third volume of Albert Camus' notes. Two more volumes of Camus' notes were also published (Notebooks 1935–1942 and Notebooks 1942–1951). This book shed light on Camus' thought related to his continual rivalry with Jean-Paul Sartre and a large part of the left, after his book The Rebel (L’Homme révolté) was published. Camus' despair is evident: "I await with patience a catastrophe that is slow in coming". His thoughts on Nobel prize are also depicted: "Nobel. Strange feeling of overwhelming pressure and melancholy. At 20 years old, poor and naked, I knew true glory. My mother."[1]
References
- ^ Orme, Mark Philip (2010) Review: Notebooks 1951-1959. H-France Review, 10. pp. 387–390. ISSN 1553-9172
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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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