The Reprieve

by Jean-Paul Sartre

Book, 1963

Status

Available

Call number

843.914

Publication

Penguin

Description

It is September 1938 and during a heatwave Europe tensely awaits the outcome of the Munich conference, where they will learn if there is to be a war. In Paris people are waiting too, among them Mathieu, Jacques and Philippe, each wrestling with their own love affairs, doubts and angsts - and none of them ready to fight. The second volume in Sartre's wartime Roads to Freedomtrilogy, The Reprievecuts between locations and characters to build an impressionistic collage of the hopes, fears and self-deception of an entire continent as it blinkers itself against the imminent threat of war.

User reviews

LibraryThing member dbancrof
This strangely written novel, authored by the leading existentialist philosopher, examines the international events leading up to the Second World War through the thematic lens of personal responsibility. The stylistic techniques of darting from one location to another without warning and drifting
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seamlessly between first- and third-person perspectives give a frantic quality to the writing that intensifies the story’s climactic moments. Not exactly a beach read, but the book’s last sentence and the events leading up to it will never be forgotten.
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LibraryThing member uh8myzen
It has been a number of years since I read this series, so i will have to be rather general about it even though it has stuck with me all these years. I am a fan of Sartre's and his existentialist contemporaries, but this series was an amazing display of Sartre's skill as a fiction writer. While I
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am generally more fond of Camus' fiction, every book in the "The Roads to Freedom" trilogy stands out as my favorite fictional work by that group. Make no mistake, this trilogy is a masterpiece of existentialist fiction."The Roads to Freedom" series (originally meant to be a tetralogy) was a fictional representation of new direction in Sartre's vision of existentialism which was far more participatory. Using the back-drop of the Nazi occupation, Sartre's characters move from a prewar existence of complete apathy toward their life and others into individuals who are empowered by the will to resist any impediments to their freedom.
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LibraryThing member HadriantheBlind
Fiction describing the despair and confusion surrounding the events of the Treaty of Munich. Sartre, I admit, is not one of my favorite authors. But both the stream-of-consciousness style and the historical context gave me a better footing for appreciating the sulkiness that pervades his books.
LibraryThing member noellib
This is book two of Sartre's trilogy of novels Les Chemins de la Liberte (The Roads to Freedom), set in Paris at the outbreak of the Second World War.
LibraryThing member DanielSTJ
A very decent novel about the period just before WW2, when war is looming on the horizon. There are quite a few characters and we are able to explore many positions of class, propriety, and social influences that are pushing the characters towards their eventual destinations and we are able to
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understand the motivations that guide them to a higher degree. The novel is very dramatic and Sartre approaches it carefully and successfully to show what he is trying to both explain and denote in his fiction.

3.5 stars.
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Language

Original publication date

1947
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