The Fall by albert Camus
In this deeply introspective novel, Albert Camus presents a narrator who slowly exposes his own hypocrisy, guilt, and moral failures through a series of confessional monologues. Set largely in Amsterdam, the story feels claustrophobic and psychologically intense, as though readers are trapped inside another person’s conscience. Camus explores themes of judgment, self deception, and existential anxiety with remarkable subtlety. The narrator’s intelligence and wit make his confessions engaging, even when they become uncomfortable. What makes the novel powerful is its refusal to provide easy moral conclusions. Instead, it invites readers to question not only the narrator’s flaws, but their own capacity for self justification and moral compromise.
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