The Immoralist

André Gide

Pages

160

Year

1902

Difficulty

Moderate

Themes

freedom, desire, morality, self-liberation

A scholar recovering from tuberculosis discovers, in the North African sun, that the life he has been living is not his own. What he does about that is where things get complicated.

Why Start Here

The Immoralist is a masterclass in narrative compression. In under 200 pages, Gide builds a complete moral universe and then methodically dismantles it. Michel, the narrator, is not a villain, he is a man who has decided to live authentically, and Gide refuses to let us entirely condemn or endorse him. That ambiguity is the point, and it still provokes.

The novel works as a philosophical inquiry disguised as a confession. Gide was writing about his own suppressed desires, his homosexuality, his rejection of Christian morality, but the story transcends autobiography. The questions it raises about freedom, self-knowledge, and the cost of radical honesty are perennial ones.

What to Expect

A slim, elegant novella told in the form of a confession to three friends. The prose is cool and precise, Gide never allows sentimentality. The North African setting (Algeria, Tunisia) is vividly rendered and central to the book’s meaning.

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