Albert Camus, as far as I'm aware, only wrote four plays in his career, so this volume contains his complete dramatic works. I haven't seen any performed but I have now read them all.
CALIGULA is extremely impressive and deals with a theme rarely broached, namely the tyranny of consistency and the anti-humanism of reason. I first read it about ten years ago.
THE JUST and THE POSSESSED I read last year. The former is an engaging and intense drama about revolution. The latter is a lengthy , complex and very ambitious adaptation of a Dostoevsky novel.
CROSS PURPOSE is more melodramatic than anything else I have seen by Camus. Although fine in its own way, I am not surprised it is the least renowned of his plays.