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The novel opens with the death of Meursault's mother, an event that triggers a chain of seemingly arbitrary events. Meursault attends the funeral with an unsettling indifference, his emotional detachment a stark contrast to the expected norms of grief. He navigates his life with a passive acceptance, indulging in simple pleasures like the sun, the sea, and a casual love affair. A fateful encounter on a sun-drenched beach leads Meursault to commit a shocking act of violence, forever altering his life's trajectory. Imprisoned and awaiting trial, he becomes an outsider, a stranger to society and its expectations. The absurdity of his situation is amplified by the court's focus on his lack of remorse rather than the crime itself. Camus masterfully explores themes of alienation, the search for meaning in a meaningless world, and the clash between individual freedom and societal norms. Meursault's journey, though disturbing, forces us to confront our own assumptions about morality and the human condition. The Stranger is a powerful and unsettling work of existentialist literature that continues to resonate with readers today. Its concise prose and thought-provoking exploration of the absurd make it a timeless classic.