Albert Camus, L’étranger (1942, Methuen Educational 1970) My practice of reading a couple of pages from a classic book every morning has been in abeyance since I finished reading Montaigne…| Me fail? I fly!
Albert Camus & Marguerite Yourcenar Notre Bibliothèque Verte n° 57 et 58 Mis en ligne par Pièces et main d’œuvre sur leur site le 3 décembre 2023 Albert Camus (1913-1960) n’eut pas de père, et Marguerite Yourcenar (1903-1987), pas de mère. Ce n’est certes pas cette similitude biographique qui réunit dans Notre Bibliothèque Verte l’auteur […]| Les Amis de Bartleby
Pastoral Bir Açılış Camus’nün Yabancı’sı, gayet sade bir açılış bölümüne sahip. Anne ölmüştür, kuru bir telgraf bunu bildirir. O kadar ki, oğul, annenin dün mü bugün mü, tam olarak ne zaman öldüğünü kestiremez. Başkarakter Mersault yola koyulur, epey yol yapacaktır, Cezayir’de Marengo kasabasına gitmesi gerekiyordur, otobüse biner ve oraya ulaşır. Annesinin ölümüne hiç üzülmemiş gibi... DEVAMINI OKU The post Yabancı: Güneş Yüzünden appeared ...| Terrabayt
Inevitably, I have been drawn back to those nice shiny new Penguin Archive 90 volumes; they sit so brightly on the TBR and call to me like sirens, and were the perfect thing to pick up and read alo…| Kaggsy's Bookish Ramblings
¿Tiene algún sentido nuestra existencia? Esta es la pregunta fundamental que el filósofo Albert Camus plantea en su obra El mito de Sísifo.| Muy Interesante México
On this day, eight years ago, Bob Dylan received a phone call that left him “speechless” after learning he had become the first musician to be awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. Prize motivation: “for having created new poetic expressions within the great American song Read More ... The post Bob Dylan won the Nobel Prize in Literature first appeared on Jax Examiner.| Jax Examiner
“I have nothing to do close to you. I did not love you enough and you did not love me enough for me to settle my final accounts with you. I must manage alone and die alone. I waited for years for you to forgive my faults and accept me as I was. You never did. I therefore kept my faults, I remained guilty, and today I must put myself in order with these faults alone. Leave me. Forgive me, then, the pain that I have caused you. And if you can, forgive me from the bottom of your heart. Tha...| - The Reader -
The Plague was written by Albert Camus (1913–60), one of the most gifted and influential writers and philosophers in the French language of the 20th century. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in liter…| Literary Theory and Criticism