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Alice Kaplan

Looking for "The Outsider"


Albert Camus and the Life of a Literary Classic
2016. 288 p. 3 maps. 232 mm
Verlag/Jahr: UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS 2016
ISBN: 0-226-44015-X (022644015X)
Neue ISBN: 978-0-226-44015-6 (9780226440156)

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The Outsider is a rite of passage for readers around the world. Since its publication in France in 1942, Camusīs novel has been translated into sixty languages and sold more than six million copies. Itīs the rare novel thatīs as at likely to be found in a teenīs backpack as in a graduate philosophy seminar. If the twentieth century produced a novel that could be called ubiquitous, The Outsider is it. How did a young man in his twenties who had never written a novel turn out a masterpiece that still grips readers more than seventy years later? With Looking for "The Outsider", Alice Kaplan tells that story. In the process, she reveals Camusīs achievement to have been even more impressive - and more unlikely - than even his most devoted readers knew. Born in poverty in colonial Algeria, Camus started out as a journalist covering the criminal courts. The murder trials he attended, Kaplan shows, would be a major influence on the development and themes of The Outsider. She follows Camus to France, and, making deft use of his diaries and letters, re-creates his lonely struggle with the novel in Montmartre, where he finally hit upon the unforgettable first-person voice that enabled him to break through and complete The Outsider. Even then, the bookīs publication was far from certain. France was straining under German occupation, Camusīs closest mentor was unsure of the bookīs merit, and Camus himself was suffering from near-fatal tuberculosis. Yet the book did appear, thanks in part to a resourceful publisher, Gaston Gallimard, who was undeterred by paper shortages and Nazi censorship. The initial critical reception of The Outsider was mixed, and it wasnīt until after liberation that The Outsider began its meteoric rise. As France and the rest of the world began to move out of the shadow of war, Kaplan shows, Camusīs book - with the help of an aggressive marketing campaign by Knopf for their 1946 publication of the first English translation - became a critical and commercial success, and Camus found himself one of the most famous writers in the world. Suddenly, his seemingly modest tale of alienation was being seen for what it really was: a powerful parable of the absurd, an existentialist masterpiece. Few books inspire devotion and excitement the way The Outsider does. And it couldnīt have a better biographer than Alice Kaplan, whose books about twentieth-century French culture and history have won her legions of fans. No reader of Camus will want to miss this brilliant exploration.