This second part of The Force of Things remains at the height of the memoir. Perhaps even more successful. From a political point of view, we are immersed in the twists and turns of the Algerian War and the return of De Gaulle. This historical event is not treated in the same way as the Second World War. Simone de Beauvoir seems to take a step back (paradoxically, she wrote this part quite soon after experiencing these events). The author struggles with her moral conscience; this is ultimately the first time she has distanced herself so much from France and the French. And we can understand this in light of the crimes of the French state! In terms of her private life, she also seems increasingly transparent, mainly through her relationship with Lanzmann. One of the most successful parts is the trip to Brazil. As much as her previous trips could seem long, this country is wonderfully well described, and one does not get bored there (no doubt because it is studied in the light of political and personal convictions). Finally, as in the previous one, one feels death closely throughout this part. And the epilogue is the climax in qualitative terms. She takes stock of her relationship with Sartre and her relationship with herself through the evolution of her body, her tastes, and her convictions. Once the complicity is established between Beauvoir and the reader, it doesn't seem easy to let go of her on such a good path. Few authors have provoked this effect in me; it is not a question of similar life, converging ideas, or style. It is a whole. Thanks to her, the work of Memoirs is sublimated!