Albert Camus
Albert Camus (1913-1960) was a French-Algerian novelist, essayist, playwright, and philosopher, best known for novels like The Stranger (1942), The Plague (1947), and The Fall (1956), and the essay The Myth of Sisyphus (1942).[2][3] Born in Mondovi, Algeria, to working-class French parents, he moved to Algiers after his father's death in World War I, worked as a journalist, joined the French Resistance during World War II, and received the 1957 Nobel Prize in Literature.[1][2][4] He died in a car crash near Sens, France, at age 46.[1][2]
Existentialism
Absurdism
Novel
Philosophy
La Peste: The Plague
La Caida: The Fall
The Plague
The Stranger
The Rebel: An Essay on Man in Revolt
The Plague: A new translation by Laura Marris
The Myth of Sisyphus: And Other Essays
Resistance, Rebellion, and Death: Essays
The Stranger (Vintage International)
The Plague (Vintage International)
L'étranger
Exile and the Kingdom
The Rebel: An Essay on Man in Revolt (Vintage International)
The Stranger
Exile and the Kingdom
The Plague
A Happy Death
The Metamorphosis (Modern Library Classics)
Algerian Chronicles
Resistance, Rebellion, and Death: Essays (Vintage International)
The Stranger
Outsider
Albert Camus's the Stranger (Barron's Book Notes)
L'Etranger (Routledge Foreign Literature Classics)