A man who strives for pure rationality and control finds himself at the mercy of fate, in a "novel that speaks tellingly of loneliness, love, and despair" ( Booklist).
Walter Faber, engineer, is a man for whom only the tangible, calculable, verifiable exists. He is devoted to the service of a purely technological world. His associates have nicknamed him Homo Faber-"Man the Maker."
But during a flight to South America, Faber succumbs to what he calls "fatigue phenomena," losing touch with reality-and soon he finds himself crisscrossing the globe, from New York to France to Italy to Greece. He also finds himself in the company of a woman who-for reasons he cannot explain or understand-strongly attracts him.
The basis for the film Voyager starring Sam Shepard, this novel "capture[s] that essential anguish of modern man which we find in the best of Camus" ( Saturday Review).
Max Frisch, born in Zurich in 1911, was one of the giants of twentieth-century literature, achieving fame as a novelist, playwright, diarist, and essayist. He died in 1991, the year
Homo Faber was made by Volker Schlondorff into the acclaimed motion picture
Voyager, starring Sam Shepard.
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