André Malraux
author profile
born
December 13, 1901
died
November 23, 1976
gender
male
place of birth
Paris, France
about this author
books by André Malraux
combine editionsavg rating: 3.70 | 317 ratings | 80 distinct works
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Man's Fate (La Condition Humaine) by André Malraux avg rating 3.77 — 143 ratings — published 1969 5 editions |
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Anti-Memoirs (Hardcover) by André Malraux avg rating 3.63 — 19 ratings — published 1990 5 editions |
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L'espoir (Paperback) by André Malraux avg rating 3.71 — 17 ratings — published 2003 2 editions |
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La Condition Humaine, texte intégral, dossier (Poche) by André Malraux avg rating 3.88 — 16 ratings — published 1996 |
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The Voices of Silence (Paperback) by André Malraux avg rating 4.00 — 14 ratings — published 1978 3 editions |
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The Conquerors (Phoenix Fiction Series) by André Malraux avg rating 3.73 — 11 ratings — published 1992 3 editions |
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Man's Hope (An Evergreen Book) by André Malraux avg rating 4.00 — 9 ratings — published 1979 5 editions |
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The Walnut Trees of Altenburg (Phoenix Fiction Series) by André Malraux avg rating 4.20 — 5 ratings — published 1992 |
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La Voie Royale (Paperback) by André Malraux avg rating 4.00 — 5 ratings — published 1996 3 editions |
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The Way of the Kings (Modern Voices) by André Malraux avg rating 4.00 — 5 ratings — published 2005 3 editions |
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quotes by André Malraux
""The great mystery is not that we should have been thrown down here at random between the profusion of matter and that of the stars; it is that from our very prison we should draw, from our own selves, images powerful enough to deny our own nothingness.""
— André Malraux
— André Malraux
"The greatest mystery is not that we have been stranded here below at random between the profusion of matter and the profusion of the stars, but that from our prison we should draw from our own selves, images and experiences powerful enough to negate our own nothingness."
— André Malraux
— André Malraux
"His [Francisco Goya's:] debt to the Christianity of the eighteenth century is contained in the idea that politics was just adopting from the Gospels: the conviction that man has a right to justice. Such a statement would seem utterly conceited to a Roman, who would doubtless have looked upon the Disasters as we look upon photographs of the amphitheatre...But if Goya thought that man has not come onto the earth to be cut to pieces he thought that he must have come here for something. Is it to live in joy and honour? Not only that; it is to come to terms with the world. And the message he never ceased to preach, a message underlined by war, is that man only comes to terms with the world by blinding himself with childishness."
— André Malraux
— André Malraux












