His fiction I really liked. "The Plague" was my favorite, but also the Stranger, and the Fall (and I feel like I'm leaving one out). Didn't so much care for the philosophical treatises (The Myth of Sisyphus).
The more so with Sartre. Brilliant fiction (Nausea and the trilogy), and plays (The Flies, No Exit, Dirty Hands, The Respectful Prostitute are all bound in one edition). Again, though the straight out philosophy is unbearable, though I kept trying to read them back when I felt like I should. "Being and Nothingness" is a most un-navigable pile of pulp.
Seeing as we've gone all French here, has anyone read Maupaissant's short stories? I really enjoyed them. Good call on Germinal as well. I didn't finish Pere Goirot, but want to give Balzac another try if anyone's got a recommendation. "Les Miserables" should be a requirement. Rollicking reat lit.
When I asked my "What 3 books from your country should I read" to a French mate of mine he said:
1. The Red and the Black - though he said Stendahl was Belgian. Haven't tried it yet, though I hear it's a bit of a commitment.
2. The Ice People - ?? - had never heard of it, it was hard to find, and it just seemed like old style sci-fi.
3. The Bombardment by Henri Barbusse - I bought it but haven't read it yet. If anyone has anything to say about it, I'm all ears.
Anyway, pretty strange list.