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Title:The Reprieve (Les Chemins de la Liberté #2)
Author:Jean-Paul Sartre
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 464 pages
Published:July 7th 1992 by Vintage (first published 1945)
Categories:Fiction. Philosophy. Cultural. France. Literature. Novels
Download Books The Reprieve (Les Chemins de la Liberté #2) Online Free
The Reprieve (Les Chemins de la Liberté #2) Paperback | Pages: 464 pages
Rating: 3.95 | 2164 Users | 112 Reviews

Narrative During Books The Reprieve (Les Chemins de la Liberté #2)

In this book Sartre uses a really interesting technique in which he switches instantaneously from a character to another one even in the middle of the sentence. We are in France, just before the beginning of the 2nd world war, and Sartre tries to describe what is happening from many different point of views. The technique used in this book reminds me the counterpoint technique in music, in which different voices coexist and intertwine maintaining their individuality. These continuos switch between the various characters creates a gestalt, something that is more than the sum of the single voices of the characters, Sartre creates invisible links that nearly create poetry. I had never read a book using this literary technique and I like it very much, I think it has a great potentiality and if somebody read other books that used it please write them in the comments, Thank you!

Declare Books As The Reprieve (Les Chemins de la Liberté #2)

Original Title: Le Sursis
ISBN: 0679740783 (ISBN13: 9780679740780)
Edition Language: English
Series: Les Chemins de la Liberté #2
Setting: Paris(France) Munich (München)(Germany)

Rating Appertaining To Books The Reprieve (Les Chemins de la Liberté #2)
Ratings: 3.95 From 2164 Users | 112 Reviews

Evaluation Appertaining To Books The Reprieve (Les Chemins de la Liberté #2)
Interesting in the change of people and situations in the narrative. This stream of consciousness writing is in the beginning disconcerting but did grow on me. The plot revolves around The Munich peace of 1938 and the delay of war for another year. Switching back between all the characters from the first novel and some new ones. The change mobilization brings to many of the characters is the theme and the impact it has on them. I look forward to the final book of the trilogy.

Disappointing, tedious, awkward, unwieldy, a grossly inferior sequel. Doesn't come close to capturing the anguish and confusion of the first novel, instead it just bashes the reader over the head with tired tropes about self-knowledge and the like.



Satre was trying a method called simultaneous description with this book. Which basically consisted of making the book far more difficult to read than necessary. The constant jumping from one character to another, and one situation to the next, made it near on unreadable.I enjoyed 'The Age of Reason' much more. Satre's usual brilliance shines through in places, but i found it a chore to read.

In this book Sartre uses a really interesting technique in which he switches instantaneously from a character to another one even in the middle of the sentence.We are in France, just before the beginning of the 2nd world war, and Sartre tries to describe what is happening from many different point of views.The technique used in this book reminds me the counterpoint technique in music, in which different voices coexist and intertwine maintaining their individuality.These continuos switch between

Aside from being a brilliant intellectual and philosopher, Sartre was an amazing writer. This is best shown (of the books I've read of course) in this second part of the "Roads to freedom" series. Sartre shifts the locations, characters and even narrators seamlessly throughout the text. But, instead of making the story incoherent and sketchy, the attention to details and great depictions of characters, actually makes the book flow very much like watching a movie.The story is set in France,

The most impressive book I've read so far, everything happenning simultaneously in a chaos-organized way; truely amazed by how pictureque a novel could be!This the 2nd book of Sartre's trilogy - Road to Freedom. Page turning. I do got light headache when I put the book down and breathe; then when I pick it up, I was dragged right back in. So powerful.Existantialism is still here and there; all freedom is relevant to what you're free from; men, women, war, panic, soldiers, peasants, old friends,

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