

desertcart.in - Buy Age Of Reason book online at best prices in India on desertcart.in. Read Age Of Reason book reviews & author details and more at desertcart.in. Free delivery on qualified orders. Review: It is intact - Product is in good condition; and to be able to get Sartre works in this price range is, well, heartwarming Review: Nice - Nice 👍
| Best Sellers Rank | #79,724 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #2,724 in Classic Fiction (Books) #5,514 in Contemporary Fiction (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars (199) |
| Dimensions | 12.9 x 1.5 x 19.76 cm |
| ISBN-10 | 0141185287 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0141185286 |
| Importer | Penguin Random House India Pvt Ltd |
| Item Weight | 1 kg 50 g |
| Language | English |
| Net Quantity | 500.00 Grams |
| Packer | Penguin Random House India Pvt Ltd |
| Paperback | 320 pages |
| Publisher | Penguin UK (6 March 2001) |
M**S
It is intact
Product is in good condition; and to be able to get Sartre works in this price range is, well, heartwarming
A**Y
Nice
Nice 👍
A**A
The best existentialist novel
The book that ushered in a new age in literature. Not only the most powerful existentialist novel but a great piece of writing.
A**A
Great Work
Although difficult to understand it is a must read for those inclined towards Philosophy. Sometime you feel the pinch of the end of life and end of whole existence(nihilism) yet Jean Paul give us in precise terms how to live
O**A
Five Stars
Great copy and a fine, engaging read! I'm hooked to Sartre now.
M**.
Pirated copy . Not original.
Don't buy . This is a pirated book which can be bought for 150/- from a footpath store . This is Not the original print
A**A
3 starts for book reaching me,
It feels inauthentic version of penguin. Book doesn't seem original. Paper quality and print both inauthentic. But readable in the end. I just don't understand how they do it in the name of original penguin products?
I**I
Authentic
M**.
This is, along with Nausea, is perhaps how most young people find Sartre in their college years. "Everyone has their French existentialism" phase, a friend once remarked to me, "the only question is whether you pick Camus or Sartre." Both the translation and the story itself are of extremely high quality, and I would say this Penguin version is better than the other versions out there—the only difficulty is that it is a bit harder to get this one in the US. If you are familiar with their Modern Classics series then you know what to expect.
D**S
The Age of Reason: Jean-Paul Sartre, 1945; trans. Eric Sutton, Penguin, London, 2001. An entertaining introduction to existentialism By Howard Jones This is painless philosophy. This philosophical treatise by one of the great existentialists, the French philosopher Jean-Paul Satre, is written in the form of a novel. It is set in immediately pre-war Paris in the summer of 1938 and describes two days in the life of a philosophy teacher called Mathieu Delarue. He now finds that his mistress of seven years, Marcelle, who rarely leaves the house she shares with her mother, is pregnant. Mathieu is in urgent need of 4000 francs to procure an abortion. Until now, he has kept his sex life quite separate from his other friends and his daytime work or play - mostly the latter in the bars and cafés of Paris. But now, unable to make the commitment of marriage, the situation with Marcelle is threatening to disrupt his playboy lifestyle. Mathieu's brother Jacques refuses to lend him the money for the abortion on moral grounds. He does however offer to lend 10,000 francs if Mathieu will marry Michelle. Another of Mathieu's girlfriends, the mean-spirited Ivich, also makes demands on him. And behind all of this is the backdrop of the looming war with its threat of occupation, which would unquestionably enforce a major change in lifestyle. So does Mathieu bite the bullet and give up his freedom in marriage - or will he have his freedom curtailed in any event by the war. If he becomes a `family man' he will no longer have the standing as the young Communist rebel. Satre has also created a homosexual friend, Daniel, for Mathieu as someone who constantly avoids relationships because he exhibits such self-loathing - or is his death-wish perhaps a result of the rejection of his companions? This is a fascinating tale and portrays so well the joy of living in the moment, without attachments and complications, but also the anguish we all go through when several factors over which we have no control are threatening to impinge on us. You need only explore the undercurrents in the novel as far as you wish. Dr Howard A. Jones is the author of The Thoughtful Guide to God (2006) and The Tao of Holism (2008), both published by O Books of Winchester, UK.
P**O
Revisiting this trilogy after many years. Not as 'hard going' as I remember it being in my early 20s....well written and engaging!
K**S
I really cannot write a review of a classic work such as this. Sartre; and this book deeply touched me and opened my mind to such wonders years ago when I read it in college. I had to get it again and read again. Still one of the most powerful books I have ever read..
P**E
In this celebrated work JPS set out his principles of freedom that would become a kind of blueprint for the 1960s. At times a strangely abstract novel that harks back to Zola for an overall feel of a decadent middle class about to make the hyper-jump to a Gallic Counter-Culture with World War 2 applying the brakes for a few years before the 1960s explosion. I am impressed with Jean-Paul's proto-hippie characters; we know them, we are them, we have been them, we loved them, we hated them. Everyone in this Parisian bubble of bohemian nightclubs, student life and existential selfishness has problems of sorts, but lets be honest, no one here is out of pocket, overworked or wondering where their next meal is coming from. All can indulge themselves in sex, philosophy, introspection, drink and drugs. The Left Bank becomes a sort of late 1930s 1960s San Fransisco, the only thing missing is rock music and flowers...man. Here the music is Jazz and yes, we even have a sex scene with the lady wearing a flower in her hair...uncanny. I mention the characters because there is little else and there doesn't need to be; the characterization is simply brilliant. Sartre cuts the frills to the bone and at times I wondered what period we were in-the 1930s, the 1870s or the 1960s. Are they selfish early yuppies? Beautiful people? Spoilt brats or pioneers of 20th Century personal freedoms? My own view is that they are all of these. A great novel that predicted and defined much of the culture of the late 20th Century.