"Nine months after the end of the Second World War, Camus crossed the Atlantic on the SS Oregon to New York, traveling between 'continents gone mad, ' as he put it. Three years later, he journeyed via Dakar to South America. This attractively illustrated new translation of the journals from those trips shows us an intensely curious, often solemn, and sometimes witty Camus as he attempts to understand the cultures he was encountering. As Alice Kaplan explains in her Introduction, the travel logs are an invitation to 'see the Americas, as if for the first time, through his eyes, ' They also chart the writer's transition towards literary celebrity and reveal the private doubts and needs that troubled him."-- "Edward J. Hughes, author of 'Albert Camus'"
"With its ample photographs, rich introduction, and smooth-flowing, conversational translation, Travels in the Americas is an engaging travel account that reintroduces Albert Camus as both a man and an existentialist icon moving through North and South America in the postwar years."-- "Foreword Reviews"
"An intimate glimpse into the psyche of a widely admired writer."-- "Wall Street Journal"
"Bloom's translation is a model of tight writing... it reads briskly, as we would expect journal entries to read, and precisely, as we would expect of anything penned by Camus... Travels in the Americas is a small, beautiful gem, worthy of a large readership."-- "Great Lakes Review"
"An elegant new translation."-- "London Review of Books"