Marguerite Audoux (1863–1937)
Autore di Marie Claire
Sull'Autore
Fonte dell'immagine: Marguerite Audoux
Opere di Marguerite Audoux
孤児マリイ 2 copie
Les Malheurs de Marie- Claire 1 copia
Marie Claire regény 1 copia
Audoux Marguerite - L'Atelier de Marie Claire: L'Atelier de Marie-Claire (French Edition) (2014) 1 copia
De la ville au moulin, roman 1 copia
De la ville au moulin 1 copia
Opere correlate
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Nome canonico
- Audoux, Marguerite
- Nome legale
- Donquichote, Marguerite
- Data di nascita
- 1863-07-07
- Data di morte
- 1937-01-31
- Luogo di sepoltura
- Cimetière de Saint-Raphael, Var, France
- Sesso
- female
- Nazionalità
- France
- Nazione (per mappa)
- France
- Luogo di nascita
- Sancoins, France
- Luogo di morte
- Saint-Raphael, France
- Luogo di residenza
- Paris, France
- Istruzione
- Hôpital général, Bourges, Cher, France (Orphelinat)
- Attività lavorative
- novelist
tailor
journalist - Relazioni
- Alain-Fournier (Ami)
Gide, André (Ami)
Mirbeau, Octave (editor)
Genevoix, Maurice (Ami)
Philippe, Charles-Louis (ami)
Fargue, Léon-Paul (ami) (mostra tutto 7)
Jourdain, Francis (ami) - Breve biografia
- Marguerite Donquichote, who took her mother's surname Audoux in 1895, was born into a family of day laborers. Her mother died when she was a toddler and her father abandoned her, and she was raised by an aunt and in an orphanage at Bourges. At age 14, she was put to work on a farm. At night, she took refuge in reading. She fell in love with a local boy, but his parents would not permit them to marry. She moved to Paris and was earning her living as a seamstress and laundress when she developed eye problems that made it necessary for her to change professions. She had been doing some fiction and memoir writing and was encouraged to continue by Michel Yell (Jules Iehl), a friend of André Gide, and a circle of young writers, intellectuals, and artists, including Charles-Louis Philippe, Léon-Paul Fargue, Léon Werth, and Francis Jourdain. The result was a runaway bestseller, the semi-autobiographical novel Marie Claire (1911), which received one of the first Prix Femina awards and later lent its name to the women's magazine Marie Claire. Marie Audoux published stories in periodicals such as Matin and Paris Journal. She wrote three more novels, L’Atelier de Marie-Claire (1920), De la ville au moulin (1926), and Douce Lumière (posthumously in 1937), though none that became as successful as the first.
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Statistiche
- Opere
- 13
- Opere correlate
- 1
- Utenti
- 66
- Popolarità
- #259,059
- Voto
- 4.0
- Recensioni
- 2
- ISBN
- 39
- Lingue
- 3
Aucun misérabilisme dans ce récit d'une petite fille qui quitte l'orphelinat religieux pour garder les agneaux dans une ferme en Sologne.
Marguerite Audoux autodidacte et autrice née qu'admirait Octave Mirbeau.