Ranked #3 in French, Ranked #4 in Existential — see more rankings.
Reviews and Recommendations
We've comprehensively compiled reviews of The plague from the world's leading experts.
Jim Collins AuthorRecommends this book
Jenny Davidson Albert Camus’s The Plague probably remains the best-known novel on the topic of epidemic disease. It tells the story of those involved in an epidemic in a North African setting. It is very interested in the details about how quarantines are enforced and the role not just of the government, but of individuals who band together into groups to manage the epidemic. (Source)
Stephen Breyer He talks about the plague. Well, the plague is that part of a human being which can be very evil. That germ, he says at the end, never dies, it simply goes into remission. It lurks. It lurks in the cupboards, it lurks in the hallways, it lurks in the filing cabinets. (Source)
Arthur Ammann It’s an amazing book, considering Camus probably never personally experienced a plague. In his novel, Camus captured everything that we were dealing with in the Aids epidemic without Aids existing at that time. Without his knowing what the consequences of the HIV plague were going to be, he seems to have gotten all the actors in there and the myriad of things that you wrestle with. (Source)
Rankings by Category
The plague is ranked in the following categories:
- #60 in 20th Century
- #63 in Africa
- #57 in African
- #19 in Black and White
- #12 in Diseases
- #5 in Existentialism
- #7 in France
- #64 in Literature
- #77 in Medicine
- #86 in Modern Classic
- #66 in Modernism
- #65 in Modernist
- #12 in Nobel
- #94 in Novel
- #5 in Pandemic
- #24 in Philosopher
- #52 in Philosophy
- #39 in Philosophy History
- #92 in Public Health
- #18 in Quarantine
- #37 in Roman
- #14 in St. Paul
- #56 in Translated