For people who study masculinities, Boule provdes a well-rounded study of masculine identity in a complex individual, whereas Sartre scholars will also benefit from the book's original take on such a universally studied intellectual * Journal of Men's Studies
...an interesting and welcome new analysis of Sartre's life and work...Boule's book is a valuable and timely contribution to the field of French Studies and would work well in a number of undergraduate and graduate courses. * SubStance
This is a bold and provocative study which succeeds in its aim of making Sartre a still more complex and contradictory figure. * Modern Language Review
A regular feature of the chapters is the clear and well-reasoned way in which correlations are made between Sartre's psycho-social formation and the concerns of his fictional characters or narrators * Journal of European Studies
...a remarkable example of the advances that have been made in contemporary Satrean criticism...This brilliant study's particularly welcome since it recovers the categories of the intellectual biography...This portrait of Sartre is extremely lively. * L'Annee Sartrienne
It's a bold undertaking, a fascinating tour de force, unrivalled in the Sartre literature. The results are brilliant, effective, and persuasive: Sartre's deficits and compensations are made clear, but never unfeelingly or abstractly. Accordingly, this study will be must reading for Sartre specialists as well as those interested in the relationship of psychology to biography. * Ronald Aronson, Wayne State University
By using the theme of masculinity, Boul succeeds in illuminating in a fresh way well-known material from Les Mots and the various biographies. Future studies of Sartre will not be able to disregard the important new questions posed by Boule's work. * Ian H. Birchall, Independent Writer, formerly Middlesex University
The central analysis/interpretation of Sartre is fascinating, in the very complex areas of the psychology of his childhood, its effects upon the rest of his life, and his convoluted attitudes on gender. It is penetrating, consistent, subtle and has that vital characteristic of drawing together all kinds of elements of Sartre that might otherwise have remained unconnected. Over and above all of this, there is a sense of genuine interest/curiosity as well as discovery: we actually see Professor Boule learning things about Sartre, and sometimes changing his mind. * Terry Keefe, Lancaster University