
Your favorite lines? How did it contribute to your questioning of ethics?

The Stranger is Albert Camus's spare, unsettling novel about Meursault, a man whose emotional distance from ordinary social expectations becomes impossible to ignore after a death and a trial. The book's plain language and compressed structure make its moral disturbance sharper: grief, heat, chance, violence, and judgment all seem stripped of comforting explanation. Camus turns simplicity into philosophical pressure.
Readers interested in existential fiction, absurdism, and twentieth-century moral thought will find The Stranger essential. Albert Camus does not ask readers to admire Meursault so much as to confront the gap between social meaning and indifferent reality. The novel endures because its calm surface keeps producing unease. Its sunlight is as merciless as any verdict, and just as final.
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Your favorite lines? How did it contribute to your questioning of ethics?