
The Stranger
by Albert Camus
Editorial review
Camus' short novel is a perfect introduction to existentialist literature, and a master class in tone. Meursault's affectlessness is not nihilism — it is the refusal to perform the emotions society expects, and the novel turns that refusal into a tragedy and a freedom at once.
AI-generated summary
Meursault, a French Algerian clerk, attends his mother's funeral, begins a relationship, and on a hot afternoon shoots a man on a beach. The second half of the novel is his trial, in which he is condemned less for the murder than for failing to grieve properly.
Key takeaways
- 1
Society punishes failures of performance as harshly as it punishes acts.
- 2
The 'absurd' is the gap between the human demand for meaning and the world's silence.
- 3
Honest indifference is more disturbing to social systems than dishonest passion.
- 4
Mortality clarifies values when little else can.
The right reader
First-time readers of philosophical fiction. A short, controlled book that pairs well with Camus' essay 'The Myth of Sisyphus.'
What it touches
How it reads
Flat, sun-drenched, unnerving.
Reading difficulty: Accessible
