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The Words
The Words

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Author: Jean-paul Sartre
Publisher: Vintage Books
Category: Book

List Price: £11.95
Buy Used: £1.69
You Save: £10.26 (86%)





Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 1090143

Media: Mass Market Paperback
Edition: 1st Vintage Books Ed
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 256
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.4 x 0.8

ISBN: 0394747097
Dewey Decimal Number: 848.91409
EAN: 9780394747095
ASIN: 0394747097

Publication Date: January 1, 1981
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: Writing Present;Stained Edges SHIPS FROM THE UNITED STATES VIA AIR MAIL. SHOULD ARRIVE WITHIN 21 BUSINESS DAYS! Our feedback rating says it all - five star service and fast delivery! We've shipped four million items!

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Words (Penguin Modern Classics)
  • Paperback - Words (Twentieth Century Classics)
  • Paperback - Words (Penguin Modern Classics)
  • Hardcover - Words
  • Paperback - Words
  • Unknown Binding - The words (Fawcett premier book)
  • Hardcover - The Words
  • Paperback - Words
  • Unknown Binding - The words
  • Unknown Binding - WORDS.
  • Unknown Binding - WORDS
  • Mass Market Paperback - WORDS

Similar Items:

  • Nausea (Penguin Modern Classics)
  • Les Mots
  • Memoirs of a Dutiful Daughter (Penguin Modern Classics)
  • No Exit, and Three Other Plays (Vintage International)
  • The Wall (New Directions Paperbook)

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars "The rule is that there are no good fathers..."   March 1, 2007
Sartre gives us his childhood and a book filled with characters, the exception being... `that one who's lacking' till the end... Sartre himself.

The man is, of course, present throughout as narrator and master writer, comic even. With the first few pages we find fathers weighing down sons as Anchises, crushing them. Further, we find peasant grandfathers betraying the future, the `myth' of the family, social hierarchy as `ritual', and religion...I cannot describe how. The man, as narrator, looms formidably over his work like the tyrant fathers and grandfathers he sees handling between themselves the lives of their offspring and dependents.
The man, as the character Sartre of Les Mots, is however an `indelible transparency', a mere `reflection in a mirror' as against the deadweight of other people, heavy with their own inertia and `carved in stone'. It is only by a vicarious life in reading, and later, by the creative act of writing that he describes himself for the first time `carving out a glorious body in words'. We find the child Sartre locked away in the towering rooftops of Parisian houses, peering down on other children below and, (he admits) regrettably, shunning them for Platonic relations with Corneille, Hugo, and Wells. Other places of his youth, the public gardens and classrooms, are ever allusions, context only for the evolution of a primarily noetic being, already (at ten) seeing himself as a dead one.

Nonetheless, this is a glorious work of revival; a working out of existence from it's opposite, the juvenile reaction; a working out of self-belief from a void authority might otherwise have colonised as its own. Sartre's story, whilst neither too conventional nor applicable in modern terms is still valuable for illuminating our own childhood and our own absurdities therefrom.



4 out of 5 stars Faithless   April 6, 2001
 6 out of 16 found this review helpful

It may seem ironic that profound ideas can spring from an illusory childhood but Words indeed expresses this sentiment. I haven't read any other of Sartre's books but I sensed that this was a good introduction to existentialism; he founded it after all, and this is his pre-adolescent life. The story is hard going and his memories (surprisingly lucid so long after the event) are difficult to relate to, but there remain lessons applicable to all. He seemingly pinpoints his lack of obedience (as an adult) to having lost his father at an early age; an interesting anomaly given that he lived through the wars. But his refutation of religion and more particularly faith of any kind were for me the most startlingly illustrated of his points. Believe his views and there will be no salvation "atheism is a cruel, long term business" but if you don't there is still a message that cannot be ignored. Inadequacy both ways.

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