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  1. The Stranger, Camus’s first novel, is both a brilliantly crafted story and an illustration of Camus’s absurdist world view. Published in 1942, the novel tells the story of an emotionally detached, amoral young man named Meursault. He does not cry at his mother’s funeral, does not believe in God, and kills a man he barely knows without any ...

  2. Watch The Stranger with a subscription on Netflix. Page 1 of 2, 6 total items. Page 1 of 5, 10 total items. A web of secrets sends family man Adam Price on a desperate quest to discover the truth ...

  3. The Stranger is a British drama-mini series created by Harlan Coben; it is based on the book of the same name also by Harlan Coben. The series follows a man's missing wife and a secret that changes things forever. The series follows Adam Price, a married man whose wife, Corrine, goes missing. When Adam is told a secret about his wife, his life changes forever, and his wife becomes seemingly more involved with more and more secrets as the series progresses. Richard Armitage as Adam Price Siobhan

  4. May 19, 2004 · The Stranger by Albert Camus. Publication date 1967 Collection millionbooks; universallibrary Language English. Addeddate 2004-05-19 11:07:15 Collectionid

  5. The crime is apparently motiveless—the Arab has done nothing to Meursault. The Arab’s mysteriousness as a character makes Meursault’s crime all the more strange and difficult to understand. A list of all the characters in The Stranger. The Stranger characters include: Meursault , Raymond Sintes, Marie Cardona , Céleste, The Chaplain.

  6. The Stranger is a strikingly modern text and Matthew Ward’s translation will enable readers to appreciate why Camus’s stoical anti-hero and ­devious narrator remains one of the key expressions of a postwar Western malaise, and one of the cleverest exponents of a literature of ambiguity.” —from the Introduction by Peter DunwoodieFirst published in 1946; now in translation by Matthew Ward.

  7. The Stranger is one of the most famous philosophical novels ever written, but this review is merely a sort of existential reaction a couple of days after reading this remarkable book. Even the edition I read, the Everyman's Library edition of Matthew Ward's translation and intro by Peter Dunwoodie, is a beautiful little volume that feels precious to hold in one's hands.

    • Albert Camus
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