Robert Margerit

Margerit Robert (25 January 1910 in Brive-la-Gaillarde 27 June 1988 in Isle, Haute-Vienne) was a French journalist and writer.

Biography

He completed high school in Limoges; he was a journalist in Limoges in 1931.

From 1948, he was editor of the Le Populaire du Centre (People's Center), where he remained a columnist after 1952. His writer's library is preserved as the "Robert Margerit" cultural Centre.[1]

Works

Novels

  • Nue et Nu (1936)
  • L'Île des perroquets 1942; Phébus, 1984
  • Mont-Dragon, 1944, Gallimard, 1952
  • Phénix, La Table ronde, 1946
  • Le Vin des vendangeurs, Gallimard, 1946
  • Par un été torride, Gallimard, 1950
  • Le Dieu nu, Phébus, 1951, Prix Renaudot
  • La Femme forte, Gallimard, 1953
  • Le Château des Bois-Noirs (1954)
  • La Malaquaise, Gallimard, 1956
  • Les Amants (1957)
  • La Terre aux loups, Gallimard, 1958
  • La Révolution, 3 volumes: L'Amour et le Temps, Les Autels de la Peur, Un Vent d’acier, Gallimard, 1963, Grand Prix du roman de l'Académie française
  • La Révolution, 4th volume: Les Hommes perdus, Gallimard, 1968; Phébus, 1989, ISBN 9782859401313*El Tesoro de Morgan, Translator Manuel Pereira, Edhasa, 1997, ISBN 978-84-350-0656-9
  • El reinado del terror, Planeta DeAgostini, 2008, ISBN 978-84-674-6311-8
  • ¡A las armas ciudadanos!, Planeta DeAgostini, 2008, ISBN 978-84-674-6015-5

Others

  • Ambigu, nouvelles, Gallimard, 1956
  • Singulier, pluriel, journal intime, publié en 2008, l'Association des amis de de Robert Margerit, Plaisir de lire

Screenplays

gollark: You should write more tests.
gollark: ***dun dun dun***
gollark: Sounds hard. I just want a useless fun thing. Is there a library for it?
gollark: You can never have enough combinatory things! How does the working-backwards-from-type thing work, anyway?
gollark: ```haskellq :: ((a0 b0 c0 -> m0 c1) -> (a0 b0 c0 -> (a0 b'0 c'0 -> a0 (b0, b'0) (c0, c'0)) -> m0 c1) -> m0 c1) -> (a0 b0 c0 -> m0 (a0 b0 c0 -> (a0 b'0 c'0 -> a0 (b0, b'0) (c0, c'0)) -> m0 c1)) -> (a0 b0 c0 -> (a0 b'0 c'0 -> a0 (b0, b'0) (c0, c'0)) -> m0 c1) -> m0 c1)q = (>>=) (<*> (***)) >>= (>>>) <$> (($) . (<=<))```

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.