Louis de Robert

French writer (1871–1937) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Louis de Robert (French pronunciation: [lwi ʁɔbɛʁ]; 5 March 1871, Paris – 27 September 1937) was a French writer; he won the Prix Femina in 1911.

Born5 March 1871
Paris, France
Died27 September 1937(1937-09-27) (aged 66)
Sannois, France
OccupationWriter
SpouseJeanne Humbert
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Louis de Robert
Louis de Robert in 1911
Born5 March 1871
Paris, France
Died27 September 1937(1937-09-27) (aged 66)
Sannois, France
OccupationWriter
SpouseJeanne Humbert
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Biography

Robert became friends with the writer Émile Zola during the political scandal Dreyfus affair and took a stand for the revision of the trial.[1]

A regular collaborator in The Journal, with Jules Renard, Alphonse Allais, Octave Mirbeau, he was the first reader of the proofs of the 1913 novel Swann's Way by his friend Marcel Proust and dissuaded Proust to shorten it.

Robert's novel Le Roman du malade, serialized in Le Figaro newspaper and then published by the Éditions Fasquelle [fr], won the 1911 Prix Femina. The novel was admired by the writers Maurice Barres, Anna de Noailles, Robert de Montesquiou and Colette.

He won the prize of the Académie Française.[clarification needed]

Personal life

Having fallen in love with Jeanne Humbert, thirty years younger, they married at the town hall of Sannois on 8 November 1928. She survived him for more than half a century and published her autobiography, Le cœur a ses raisons, in 1986, on vanity press.

Works

[clarification needed]

  • 1894: Un tendre
  • 1896: Papa[2]
  • 1896: Fragiles.[3]
  • 1897: The Eternal Enigma[4] Yvette Guilbert, New York City
  • 1898: La Première Femme
  • 1900: La Reprise
  • 1901: Le Mauvais Amant
  • 1901: Le Partage du cœur
  • 1911: Le Roman du malade (winner, Prix Femina)
  • 1912: L'envers d'une courtisane
  • 1918: Le Prince amoureux[5]
  • 1921: Réussir
  • 1921: Reconnais-toi
  • 1922: Silvestre et Monique
  • 1924: Paroles d'un solitaire[6]
  • 1925: Octavie
  • 1925: Comment débuta Marcel Proust, lettres inédites
  • 1925: Le Préféré
  • 1926: Le Roman d'une comédienne
  • 1927: Le Supplice des bourgeois de Premz
  • 1927: Ni avec toi, ni sans toi
  • 1928: Souvenirs sur Edmond Rostand
  • 1930: De l'amour à la sagesse, suivi de Réflexions sur Marcel Proust
  • 1931: La Rose et le cyprès
  • 1932: Journal d’un mari
  • 1933: Tragédie du désir
  • 1936: Trop belle

Posthumous

  • Lettres à Paul Faure, 1898–1937, 1943

References

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