Browsing Books by Author's Name Asc / Desc

The Plague (1948)
A novel with the dreaded plagues as the powerful force affecting people....

Camus at Combat (2007)
For the first time in English, "Camus at Combat" presents all of Camus' World War II resistance and ...

The Outsider (1998)
Albert Camus' laconic masterpiece about a Frenchman who murders an Arab in colonial Algeria is famou...

The Myth of Sisyphus, and Other Essays (1955)
Essays deal with nihilism and the problem of suicide...

The First Man (1996)
Traces the story of Jacques Cormery, a young man who rises above the losses and misfortunes of his c...

The Stranger (1989)
An ordinary man is unwittingly caught up in a senseless murder in Algeria...

Exile and the Kingdom (2007)
A compelling new translation of a collection of short fiction by the Nobel Prize-winning author expl...

The Rebel (1991)
The author traces the ways in which the theories of philosophers such as Rousseau, Hegel and Marx ha...

You're Not Who You Think You Are (2008)
A founder of The Sedona Intensive Institute's alternative therapy program invites readers to discove...

The Exodus According to G (2010)
"Within the Egyptian "Kings" chronology, upon which most if not all ancient history dating has been ...

Albert Einstein, Philosopher-Scientist (1998)
Written by the man considered the Person of the Century by Time magazine, this is not a glimpse into...

The Meaning of Relativity (2005)
Containing his four lectures given at Princeton University that gave an overview of his then controv...

Geometrie und Erfahrung (1923)
Two influential essays: "Ether and Relativity" (1920) discusses properties demanded of the ether of ...

Sidelights On Relativity (2004)
One reason why mathematics enjoys special esteem, above all other sciences, is that its laws are abs...

Relativity (2007)
The Nobel Prize-winning scientist's presentation of his landmark theory According to Einstein himsel...

Einstein's 1912 manuscript on the special theory of relativity (2003)
The influence of Einstein's contributions on so many branches of physics is such that if one wanted ...