![]() ![]() On this vessel of high modernism, Picasso painted Les Demoiselles d’Avignon in 1907. ![]() The site is still about as picturesque a place as Paris has to offer: up a terraced set of steps, on one side of a cobblestone square with its own fountain, the little hotel stood directly across from the Bateau-Lavoir, a beehive of artist studios, spread out like a ship. ![]() The former Hôtel du Poirier on the rue Ravignan sits atop one of Paris’s “buttes” or hills, whose cleaner air might have benefitted the young writer, who struggled with chronic tuberculosis. Paris has changed enormously since 1940, but you can still walk in Camus’s footsteps through places that a few literary specialists have put on the map and come close to a moment of artistic creation.Ĭamus finished a first draft of his novel alone in a hotel room in Montmartre. The city, eerily calm, overtaken with a sense of dread, was weeks from the German invasion. From March to May 1940, Albert Camus was that man, finishing a draft of the book he was calling The Stranger. The myth is tenacious: an unknown writer on the verge of international fame, not suspecting that the scattered pages on his or her desk will become that miracle, a first published novel and a passport to glory. ![]()
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