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Troubador Publishing Paperback English

Jean-Paul Sartre and a Broken Heart

By Neil Skilton

Regular price £10.99 £9.34 Save 15%
Unit price
per
15% off

Troubador Publishing Paperback English

Jean-Paul Sartre and a Broken Heart

By Neil Skilton

Regular price £10.99 £9.34 Save 15%
Unit price
per
 
Dispatched tomorrow with Tracked Delivery - free when you spend over £15
Delivery expected between Wednesday, 1st July and Thursday, 2nd July
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  • An existential dropout tries to restore his sanity by thinking, a tour guide attempts to repair a broken heart by shagging. Together, they ponder if a moment of perfect passion is worth a lifetime of remorse. Steve and Clive, best friends at Exeter University, take different career paths with contrasting fortunes. Disillusioned with life, they reunite three years later in Texas, before embarking on a journey to reminisce, resolve, and plan their futures. They undertake a physical and emotional road trip through desolate Mexican landscapes, travelling in a temperamental Dodge as unreliable as its passengers. The journey is laced with reminisces of their time at university – self-discovery, the music of the 70s, experimentation with drugs, and barren disco nights. Clive exploits every opportunity to have sex, while Steve advises that successful relationships are built on the twin pillars of authenticity and responsibility. Steve, influenced by Sartre’s Being and Nothingness, attempts to explain how to live as a true existentialist, authentically, accepting responsibility for choices, confronting anguish, and resisting suicide, while Clive mopes. Steve deduces that a true existentialist could never write such a voluminous work when he was struggling to finish reading it.
An existential dropout tries to restore his sanity by thinking, a tour guide attempts to repair a broken heart by shagging. Together, they ponder if a moment of perfect passion is worth a lifetime of remorse. Steve and Clive, best friends at Exeter University, take different career paths with contrasting fortunes. Disillusioned with life, they reunite three years later in Texas, before embarking on a journey to reminisce, resolve, and plan their futures. They undertake a physical and emotional road trip through desolate Mexican landscapes, travelling in a temperamental Dodge as unreliable as its passengers. The journey is laced with reminisces of their time at university – self-discovery, the music of the 70s, experimentation with drugs, and barren disco nights. Clive exploits every opportunity to have sex, while Steve advises that successful relationships are built on the twin pillars of authenticity and responsibility. Steve, influenced by Sartre’s Being and Nothingness, attempts to explain how to live as a true existentialist, authentically, accepting responsibility for choices, confronting anguish, and resisting suicide, while Clive mopes. Steve deduces that a true existentialist could never write such a voluminous work when he was struggling to finish reading it.