Wednesday, October 29, 2008

The Stranger by Albert Camus

I am working on reading this book both in English (my first language) and Spanish (one I am hoping to acquire.) The story won the Nobel Prize in Literature. I am pretty sure it was written in French, originally.

This is a story filled with much detail, the kind not usually found in a novel. The protagonist is informed that his mother has died. He goes to the funeral, but, does not wish to view the body. The reason for this is never given. Does he cry at the funeral, or, feel any grief?

Monsieur Mersault's mother had been placed in a home in Marengo. The author mentions Algiers. Descriptions of what is the end result of violent revenge are included. A murder is committed and the protagonist is unable to plainly state the truth in his own defense.

The book guides us to a point where the truth is made to look as ridiculous as a clown. It is not so much the absence of truth as the inability to recognize it when it is presented. It is rejected without a thought. The truth is murdered and the body well concealed.

Camus explores the absurdity that is stirred as a result of existential questions. Is there an afterlife? The protagonist confronts his own mortality. Each individual must reach his or her own conclusion.