About This Book
An intimate portrait traces the life of a boy named Albert raised in a dull provincial town, born into an ordinary bourgeois family and shaped by cramped domestic routines. From infancy he reacts against surrounding banality, developing early skepticism and acute perception as he learns to walk and speak. The narrative examines his inward awareness and persistent discontent, using satirical descriptions of small-town mores to reflect on human suffering, social conformity, and the struggle between instinct and reason. Episodes alternate observation, philosophical digression, and ironic commentary to map a gradual awakening to existential frustration.
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