Sunday, January 18, 2026

Review of The Plague by Albert Camus

This book review was written by Eugene Kernes   

Book can be found in: 
Genre = Novel
Book Club Event = Book List (02/28/2026)


Watch Short Review


Excerpts

“One useful way to get to know a city is to find out how people work there, how they love there, and how they die there.  In our little city, perhaps because of the climate, all these things are done together, with the same frenetic and absent attitude.  In other words, people here get bored and concentrate on developing their habits.  Our fellow citizens work hard, but always to make themselves richer.  Above all, they are interested in trade and their first concern, in some form or other, is to do business.” – Albert Camus, Chapter I, Page 8

 

“When you’re at war, you barely have any idea of what a dead man is.  And since a dead man carries no wight unless you’ve seen him dead, a hundred million corpses strewn across history are nothing but smoke in the imagination.  The doctor remembered the plague of Constantinople, which according to Procopius killed ten thousand victims a day.  Ten thousand dead equaled five times the audience of a large movie theater.  That’s what they should do.  Gather up the people at the exists of five cinemas, take them to a city square, and make them die in piles to see it a little more clearly.  At least then they could put faces they knew to that anonymous pile.” – Albert Camus, Chapter I, Page 30-31

 

“From that moment on, it’s fair to say the plague concerned us all.  Until then, despite the surprise and worry these strange events had brought, our fellow citizens had pursued their occupations, in the usual way, as much as they were able.  And that would surely continue.  But once the gates were closed, they realized, along with the narrator, that they were caught in the same net and would have to cope with it.  And so, for example, a feeling as individual as separation from a loved one suddenly became, from the earliest weeks on, the feeling of a whole people, and, along with fear, the primary anguish during this long period of exile.” – Albert Camus, Chapter II, Page 48


Review

Is This An Overview?

Rats started to die in public, in the streets.  As more and more rats died, the people went about their business without thinking much about the strange events.  When people started to get sick, the medical community took some notice, and did want to take a minor initiative to prevent more people from getting sick.  But had to go through an authority who did not want to disturb the public, did not think there was a contagion.  As more and more people died, the large quantities of people did not count for much, as they were anonymous, as people care less for the unwitnessed death.

 

When the plague was partially recognized, when the plague could not be readily ignored, it was assumed to be temporary for plague interfered with business, and therefore had no future among the people.  What caused people to concern themselves with the plague, was when the city gates were closed.  The isolation caused people to take notice.  Take notice, but not react to the plague.  As the plague affected the city, there was a paper shortage.  Even with the paper shortage, a new newspaper appeared to inform people of the plague, that quickly transitioned to marketing for products that claimed to prevent the plague.  What will happen to the city?

Caveats?

The writing style has mixed quality.  Sometimes providing psychological observations, other times tedious details.  The mixed quality is a method of providing the diverse perspectives on the plague.


Questions to Consider while Reading the Book

•What is the raison d’etre of the book?  For what purpose did the author write the book?  Why do people read this book?
•What are some limitations of the book?
•To whom would you suggest this book?
•How to get to know the people of a city?
•What kind of treatment do sick people need? 
•Who is the narrator? 
•What happened to the rats of the city?
•How did people respond to the rats of the city?
•What happened when people started to get sick?
•How are the dead counted?
•What happened when plague was recognized?
•How did people recognize that there was a plague? 
•What happened to the city after the quarantine? 
•What was the Courier of the Epidemic?
•What ideas about religion are shared?
•What happened to the public health squads? 
•What happened to crime in the city?
•How did burial ceremony’s change? 
•Did the plague end?

Book Details
Translator:              Lauira Marris
Original Language: French
Translated Into:       English
Publisher:               Borzoi Book [Penguin random House]
Edition ISBN:         9780593318676
Pages to read:          200
Publication:             2021
1st Edition:              1947
Format:                    eBook 

Ratings out of 5:
Readability    4
Content          3
Overall          3