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The Fall

by Albert Camus

Novella of a prosecutor confessing his complicity in judging and condemning the innocent

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About the author

Albert Camus
Albert Camus

French-Algerian Nobel laureate who developed the philosophy of the Absurd—the conflict between humans' desire for meaning and the universe's silence. The Stranger and The Myth of Sisyphus explore this theme; The Plague extends it to collective resistance. He died in a car accident at 46.

More by Albert Camus

  • The StrangerNovel of an emotionally detached man indifferent to his mother's death and eventual murder trial→
  • The PlagueAllegorical novel depicting a coastal town's struggle against epidemic plague and despair→
  • The First ManAutobiographical novel of a man discovering his roots in Algerian colonial past→
  • Exile and the KingdomCollection of stories exploring exile, isolation, and human connection across cultures→
  • The Myth of SisyphusPhilosophical essay arguing for life affirmation despite existence's apparent meaninglessness→
  • The RebelPhilosophical essay examining rebellion, freedom, and the nature of human suffering→

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