The Unnamable (The Trilogy #3)
Samuel Beckett
Rated: 3.93 of 5 stars
3.93
· 14 ratings · 176 pages · Published: 1953
The novel is a mix of recollections and existential musings on the part of its narrator, many of which pertain specifically to the possibility that the narrator is constructed by the language he speaks. Other 'characters' (a stretch to call them distinctly different than the narrator) serve as the passive recipient of the dialogue and in many places (as the narrator suggests) the dialogue's genesis. The novel builds in its despairing tone until the ending, which consists mainly of very long run-on sentences. It closes with the phrase "I can't go on, I'll go on," which was later used as the title of an anthology of Beckett works.
The Unnamable is a 1953 novel by Samuel Beckett. It is the third and final entry in Beckett's "Trilogy" of novels, which begins with Molloy followed by Malone Dies. It was originally published in French as L'Innommable and later translated by the author into English. Grove Press published the English edition in 1958.
Tagged as:
- classics 3
- 20th century 3
- literary fiction 2
- existentialism 2
- drama 2
- absurdism 1
- historical 1
- Add topics
- format - reader age
- audiobook 2
- book 1
- adult fiction 1
romance tags
crime tags
literary-fiction tags
historical-fiction tags
fantasy tags
sci-fi tags
action-adventure tags
thriller tags
horror tags
Collections/Custom tags
The 'The Trilogy' series
4.01 · 94 ratings
20th-century · literary · philosophy · adult · existentialism · literary-fiction · drama · fiction · classics · audiobook · book · historical · postmodernism · absurdism · contemporary · psychological
The Trilogy reading order and complete book list ❯