JEAN-PAUL SARTRE — BOOK GUIDE
Five books for reading Sartre without giving up
A paper knife is designed for a purpose before it exists. A human being is different: we are thrown into the world first, then define ourselves through our choices. That is the everyday sense of “existence precedes essence.” Because we cannot escape choosing, Sartre says we are “condemned to be free.” This shelf moves from an accessible history to the 1943 magnum opus in a no-stall order.
New to philosophy? This guide keeps the language warm and practical. To widen out toward phenomenology and Western philosophy, visit the general Philosophy Bookshelf.
Recommended rankingRANKING
Start with number one if you are unsure. Prices and availability are shown on Amazon.
- 1
Beginner
At the Existentialist Café: Freedom, Being, and Apricot Cocktails
A lively narrative history of the existentialist movement centered on Sartre and Beauvoir, with Camus, Heidegger, Husserl, and Merleau-Ponty woven into the story. Written for readers with no philosophy background, it supplies the people and context before the primary works.
Other Press, 2017 paperback · approximately 448 pages · Check price and availability on Amazon
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Beginner–intermediate
Existentialism Is a Humanism
Sartre’s famous 1945 public lecture defends existentialism in direct language. It states “existence precedes essence” and explains why human beings are “condemned to be free.”
Yale University Press, 2007 · approximately 128 pages · Check price and availability on Amazon
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Intermediate
Nausea (New Directions Paperbook)
Sartre’s 1938 debut novel follows Antoine Roquentin’s diary as he confronts the raw contingency of things. It is a narrative gateway into existentialism.
New Directions, 2013 printing · approximately 192 pages · Check price and availability on Amazon
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Specialist
The Imaginary: A Phenomenological Psychology of the Imagination (Routledge Classics)
Sartre’s 1940 study argues that consciousness can intend objects as absent or non-existent. That account of imagination is a key stepping-stone toward the freedom and nothingness of Being and Nothingness.
Routledge Classics, 2010 paperback · approximately 240 pages · Check price and availability on Amazon
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Primary source
Being and Nothingness
Sartre’s 1943 magnum opus develops being-in-itself, being-for-itself, bad faith, and radical freedom. It is a foundational text of French existentialism in the Husserl–Heidegger lineage.
Washington Square Press / Pocket Books, 1993 reissue · approximately 864 pages · Check price and availability on Amazon
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Compare the five booksCOMPARE
The main risk is beginning with the summit. Use level and type to choose a realistic next step.
| Book | Difficulty | Edition | Type | Best for | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| At the Existentialist CaféSarah Bakewell | Beginner · accessible introduction | Other Press, 2017 paperback · approximately 448 pages | History and context | This is the welcoming first step: learn the story and meet the people before taking on the arguments. It is a context book by Sarah Bakewell, not a work by Sartre. | Amazon Review |
| Existentialism Is a HumanismJean-Paul Sartre · translated by Carol Macomber · introduction by Annie Cohen-Solal | Beginner–intermediate · short primer | Yale University Press, 2007 · approximately 128 pages | Public lecture | Short, self-contained, and plain-spoken, this is the best brief primer on Sartre’s core ideas. The Yale edition also includes his commentary on Camus’s The Stranger and a biographical introduction. | Amazon Review |
| NauseaJean-Paul Sartre · translated by Lloyd Alexander · introduction by James Wood | Intermediate · novel | New Directions, 2013 printing · approximately 192 pages | Novel | After the lecture, the ideas become lived experience. The standard US Lloyd Alexander translation in this printing includes an introduction by James Wood and is far more approachable than the treatises. | Amazon Review |
| The ImaginaryJean-Paul Sartre · translated by Jonathan Webber | Specialist · primary source | Routledge Classics, 2010 paperback · approximately 240 pages | Phenomenological psychology | This is the specialist deep cut, best for readers with some philosophy background. Choose the affordable 2010 Routledge Classics paperback rather than the pricey 2015 reissue. | Amazon Review |
| Being and NothingnessJean-Paul Sartre · translated by Hazel E. Barnes | Primary source · hardest | Washington Square Press / Pocket Books, 1993 reissue · approximately 864 pages | Phenomenological ontology | Save this long, technically demanding summit for last. The Barnes translation is the classic, affordable, widely stocked edition featured here. | Amazon Review |
A no-stall reading orderROADMAP
Meet the people, hear Sartre’s short statement, experience the ideas in fiction, examine a specialist bridge, and only then climb to the full ontology.
- STEP 1 — GET THE STORY
At the Existentialist Café
This is the welcoming first step: learn the story and meet the people before taking on the arguments. It is a context book by Sarah Bakewell, not a work by Sartre.
View At the Existentialist Café on Amazon - STEP 2 — HEAR THE LECTURE
Existentialism Is a Humanism
Short, self-contained, and plain-spoken, this is the best brief primer on Sartre’s core ideas. The Yale edition also includes his commentary on Camus’s The Stranger and a biographical introduction.
View Existentialism Is a Humanism on Amazon - STEP 3 — LIVE THE IDEAS
Nausea
After the lecture, the ideas become lived experience. The standard US Lloyd Alexander translation in this printing includes an introduction by James Wood and is far more approachable than the treatises.
View Nausea on Amazon - STEP 4 — TAKE THE DEEP CUT
The Imaginary
This is the specialist deep cut, best for readers with some philosophy background. Choose the affordable 2010 Routledge Classics paperback rather than the pricey 2015 reissue.
View The Imaginary on Amazon - STEP 5 — REACH THE SUMMIT
Being and Nothingness
Save this long, technically demanding summit for last. The Barnes translation is the classic, affordable, widely stocked edition featured here.
View Being and Nothingness on Amazon
If you choose only oneSTART HERE
Choose At the Existentialist Café. It gives a general reader the people, history, and vocabulary needed to make the next four books less forbidding. It is a context book by Sarah Bakewell, not a Sartre text.
Start with At the Existentialist Café