L'exil et le royaume

185 pages

French language

Published Dec. 24, 1992 by Gallimard.

ISBN:
978-2-07-036078-9
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5 stars (1 review)

"[Exile and the kingdom] consists of six "short stories". The term must be as loosely applied as was that of "novel" to last year's The Fall. The tales, precise, almost stark, are concerned with illuminating the dispossessed- symbolically projected in the exile of man. Two, "The Adulterous Woman" and "The Renegade" take the deserts for their scenes; its barrenness brings revelation to Janine, madness to the renegade missionary. In "The Artist At Work" he elucidates the encumbrance and distraction which love entails and the failure in flight from love. "The Silent Men" and "The Guest" are stoic statements for compassion, for no other reason than for men's need to draw comfort from one another. The stories have the purity, dignity and involution expected from Camus and will find their own critical audience." (Kirkus Review, 10 March 1957)

35 editions

reviewed Exile and the kingdom by Albert Camus (Penguin modern classics)

Review of 'Exile and the kingdom' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This is a collection of 6 short stories by this Nobel laureate who wrote in French. I read from a 1966 Penguin edition, which is a translation to English by Justin O'Brien. These stories are detailed, picturesque, expansive and very subtle. (This book has to be read in quiet settings with a still mind.) The settings of the stories go from deep in the Brazilian jungle to the deserts of Algeria to Spain and France. People, cultures (especially French and Algerian, Camus is a French-Algerian), faith and spirituality play a part in all the stories. Though the stories are simple on the surface, they go deep with multiple interpretations. I don't think I got most of those. The book is just 152 pages, but it takes a lot of mental chewing. Good read, I should read more Camus.