Voici le parcours de Camus, oeuvre par oeuvre, de ses premières pages jusqu'aux dernières. Comment chaque livre fut écrit, comment il fut reçu en son temps, ce qu'en pense le lecteur d'aujourd'hui. On assiste aussi à la formation et à l'évolution d'un homme. A travers les récits, les essais, le théâtre d'un artiste attaché à créer ses propres mythes, on découvre ses sources les plus profondes. Ils ne disent pas seulement l'absurde et la révolte. On peut discerner en eux une émotion plus intime dont l'origine est " l'admirable silence d'une mère et l'effort d'un homme pour retrouver une justice ou un amour qui équilibre ce silence ".
Roger Grenier was a French writer, journalist and radio animator. He was Regent of the Collège de ’Pataphysique.
In his youth he lived in Pau, where his mother opened a shop selling glasses. During the war, Roger Grenier attended Gaston Bachelard's classes at the Sorbonne before actively participating in 1944 in the liberation of Paris. He joined Albert Camus in the newspaper "Combat" then in "France Soir". Journalist, he followed post-war trials which inspired his first essay in 1949 "Le Rôle d'accusé". Radio animator, writer for television and cinema, member of the Gallimard board, he is recipient of the "Grand prix de l'Académie française" awarded to him in 1985 for his whole work, more than thirty works at that moment, novels, including two best-sellers "Le Palais d'hiver" of 1965 and "Ciné-roman", Prix Femina in 1972, essays and memoirs. He is best known in the United States for his work "The Difficulty of Being a Dog" (Les larmes d'Ulysse), translated by Alice Kaplan. He is still writing and is a busy conference attendee, speaking about his works, literature, Gallimard, or his friends: Albert Camus and Brassaï.