In April 1938, Sartre's first novel
Nausea was published. Three months later, in July, he wrote to
Simone de Beauvoir: "I have all at once found the subject of my [next] novel, its proportions and its title... The subject is freedom." Originally it was to be titled "Lucifer", and written in two parts – "La Revolte" and "Le Serment" (The Oath). In the autumn of 1938, Sartre began writing the novel that was to become
The Age of Reason, and continued working on the novel on and off for the next year. In early September 1939, he was called up into the French Army and was assigned to the meteorological unit. Except for some regular meteorological observations, this war work was not exacting, and he had plenty of time to work on his novel, his war diaries, and numerous letters to friends. At one point he produced seventy-three pages of the novel in thirteen days. He had completed the novel by December 31, 1939, and immediately started a sequel, which he originally wanted to call
September (referring to the
Munich Agreement of September 1938), and which became titled
The Reprieve. He finished writing
The Reprieve in November 1943. However, he was constantly editing the manuscripts, and also turned them over to Simone de Beauvoir for critique. His writing in these novels was semi-autobiographical. His separation from his accustomed life in Paris and the leisure and structure of his war work led him to continued introspection during this period. Mathieu was based upon himself, Ivich was based on
Olga Kosakiewicz (a student of Simone de Beauvoir and friend of Sartre), Gomez was based on
Fernando Gerassi, Sarah on Stephania Avdykovych (both very close friends of Sartre and de Beauvoir), and Boris was based on Sartre's friend
Jacques-Laurent Bost. Marcelle, perhaps loosely based on Simone de Beauvoir, was the character most removed from the real-life model.
The Age of Reason and
The Reprieve were published together after the war in September 1945. "Sartre was by now France's leading intellectual voice, and the novels, not least because they defined a critical period in French history, were received with great enthusiasm by the French public." However, some reviews were mixed. Louis Parrot writing for
Les Lettres francaises said, "Jean-Paul Sartre has definitely taken his place among the greatest French writers of our day... His powerful talent has affirmed itself with rare brilliance." Gaéton Picon writing for
Confluences said, "If Sartre's ambition was to force the doors of literary history, he has succeeded.. Like all great novelists, he also enjoys the privilege of having a universe of his own." However, Louis Beirnart, writing for
Etudes, said, "If books could smell, one would have to hold one's nose in front of Sartre's latest books... Sartre's objective is, very clearly, to show life through its excrement and lower the value of existence to the level of the gutter and the dump." Orville Prescott in
The New York Times, disliked the work, writing "as a creative work of fiction 'The Age of Reason' is a tedious disappointment. Its possible significance as 'existentialist fiction is pitifully meager, too", as well as criticizing Sartre's portrayal of the characters for being both uninteresting and unbelievable. Extracts of the third novel in the trilogy,
Iron in the Soul (or
Troubled Sleep), appeared in the journal
Les Temps Modernes in January and June 1949, and it was published in book form later that year. The reviews were not good. As for the reception, Sartre scholar Michel Contat says:
Troubled Sleep "failed to provoke the anticipated and promised positive responses, as critics transferred their moral disappointment into an accusation that [
Troubled Sleep] represented an exhaustion of Sartre's literary creativity. Although Sartre always said that he accorded no importance to the judgments of literary reviewers, his partial failure in their eyes intimidated him in the face of the fourth volume..." Consequently, Sartre was unable to complete the series. ==Characters==