Bibliothèque de SuZette
questa pagina proviene per gentile concessione dal sito "bibliothèque de suzette" ora chiuso

Bibliothèque de Suzette was first advertised in La Semaine de Suzette, no 41, 13 Nov. 1919. It consisted of 10 titles
(1ère série).

In December 1920, in time for Christmas and the New Year, G&L advertised a Nouvelle Série of another ten titles, (2me série). The volumes were all un-numbered.

The titles were book versions of some of the feuilletons G&L had published in La Semaine de Suzette since 1905, written by authors who were also writing for their other collections Bibliothèque de ma Fille and Collection Familia and for Catholic publishers such as Mame & Fils and La Maison de La Bonne Presse.

They were all inspired by the highest moral and religious, i.e. Catholic, principles. The collection continued unchanged until 1959 when it was renamed Nouvelle Bibliothèque de Suzette (NBS).
From n°52 (Claudia la petite romaine, publ. in 1963), it became Bibliothèque Bleue.

Publications ended in 1965.

The whole collection consists of 249 titles (see LIST). A very few titles were re-edited in the mid-'90s in the collection Enquêtes de La Bibliothèque de Suzette (Editions du Triomphe).

WHERE TO FIND SUZETTES:
THEMA LIVRES
an excellent online bookshop for
La Semaine & Bibliothèque.

BD.anciennes
une boutique en ligne, située à Bordeaux
entièrement dédiée à la bande dessinée ancienne
offers a vast choice of early Suzettes

****

Nouvelle Bibliothèque de Suzette



no 42, November 20, 1919


no 46, December 16, 1920


EDITORS:

J. Wilson and Anne des Déserts

AUTHOR

TITLE
d'AGON DE LA CONTRIE, MARIE








Fraternité, 1900
Dédicace
"A Marie-Louise Accary"
(Born at Versailles in 1885,
Marie Louise Charlotte was the
daughter of Léon Accary Controleur Générale de l'Armée)

Le Mousse de Terre-Neuvas
ed. 1909
relatant la vie d'un orphelin qui quitte la Normandie
et s'engage à bord du brick "Tante-Sophie"
pour Terre-Neuve




Petite fée, ill. Raymond de la Nézière, 1920 (2nde série), 1939
Pauvre Charlotte, ill. (Paul Adolphe) Kauffmann, 1921, 1932

1920
1939
1921
1932

ALANIC MATHILDE
(b. Angers 10/11/1864 - d. 20 /11/ 1948)

Alanic Mathilde, fille de Louis, peintre en bâtiments et Mathilde Louise Verdun, san profession, née au faubourg Bressigny, Angers. Femme de lettres.
Elle écrit son premier livre en espagnol à l'âge de 11 ans, et des nouvelles sous le pseudonyme de Miranda qui furent publiées dans la Revue de l'Anjou puis dans le journal l'Illustration
Élève de Bergson (qu'elle appela L'Enchanteur) à l'école supérieure des lettres d'Angers, (1881-1882) elle publie plus de trente romans, tous destinés au public familial: Norbert Dys (1899), Ma cousine Nicolle (1901), La Gloire de Fontec laire (1907), La Petite Miette (1911), Les Roses refleurissent (1919), Le Sachet de lavande (1924). Ses romans s'inspirent souvent avec bonheur du terroir angevin. Dans Espérances, elle déguise Angers sous le nom de Brie-sur-Loire. Elle a reçu le prix Sobrier-Arnould décerné par l'Académie française à des ouvrages moralisateurs et de belle tenue littéraire (text from Angévins Célebres ©www.angers.fr)
Debuta par un conte: La soutane de l'abbé Constantin dans l'Illustration en 1897.
Prix Jules Favre et Prix Sobrier-Arnould de L'Académie Française for Petite Miette, Plon, 1919, 7me éd), avant d'écrire une trentaine de romans principalement sentimentaux. Elle fut la contemporaine et la rivale littéraire de Colette. Elle resta célibataire.
Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur, 1929. En 1969 Angers lui dedia une rue.


Mathilde Alanic,
sur les ailes du coeur


Francine chez les Gens de Rien
Flammarion, 1932

Les Vacances de Guignolette, ill. Guydo, n°3, 1923 & 1932 & 1938


1923
1932
ALCOTT LOUISE MAY
(American, b. 1832 - d. 1881)

Very famous author of Little Women.
Sous les lilas, Ouvrage traduit de l'anglais... par Mme S. Lepage Paris, Hachette, 1880 in Bibliothèque rose illustrée, was one of the first (if not the first) Alcott's books published in France.

The same year, J. Hetzel (as P.J. Stahl) personally translated and published Little Women under the title Les Quatre filles du docteur Marsch, d'après L. M. Alcott, par P.-J. Stahl... , J. Hetzel, 1880) in Bibliothèque d'éducation et de récréation. Over the next decade he published more Alcott's books in the same collection.

Georges Pichard
- illustrator
(17 Jan1920-9 June 2003)


L.M. Alcott et Georges Pichard



Magasin d'Education et de Récréation
Les Quatre filles du Docteur Marsch
Hetzel 1880
Hetzel's version by Hachette
1923

 

La Deuxième fille du docteur March, 1949, (NBS no 22, 1960 ) ill. G. Pichard (Adapté par France de Bardy from Little Women)

1949
1960

AMESTOY AMELIE
(born Tarbes?, 1876? - Active 1896-1918)

Amestoy was a native of the Pays Basque, born possibly in Tarbes (Hautes Pyrenées) In 1895 an Amélie Amestoy obtained in Toulouse the Baccalaureat de l'Enseignement Sécondaire Classique, thus qualifying as an institutrice.
Amestoy started her career as a children's playwriter and librettist, the following year, writing numerous libretti operettas and comedies. her popularity peaking around 1899-1903. She worked in collaboration with the musician Georges Meugé, who died in 1916 when Amestoy output ends.
Her first recorded work dates from 1896 (i.e. Je serai Doctoresse, comédie en 2 actes, ed. R. Haton, et La Fête de Catherine II, opérette en 2 actes, both listed in l'Almanach des Spectacles 1896) & L'Héritage de la marquise, comédie, par A. Amestoy . 1898
Her only contribution to La Semaine de Suzette was Le Lézard bleu published in 1918.

La Bataille des fleurs
Paroles de Amélie Amestoy
Musique de Georges Meugé

GEORGES MEUGE
(b.4 July 1847, Vernon,27 -d. 9 June 1916, Mantes la Jolie,78)

Fonctionnaire de l'Adm. Pénitenciaire. Musicien


Le Lézard bleu, ill. Edouard Zier, 1922 , 1934

1922
1934



ANN et GWEN
(Belgian, b. Brussels, 12 Dec 1902 - d.?)

Pseudonyme d'Ilka Anne Irma Charlotte Rézette Mme René Bolles et de sa fille Jacqueline.
Elle épousa René Bollès (ou Bolle) le 22 Mai 1924. Ils eurent trois garçons et deux filles et divorcerent en 1937
Rézette entama des etudes de music (piano) et peinture. Elle exposa au Palais de Beaux Arts , Bruxelles en 1937. Le peintre Emile Lecombe peignit son portrait en 1937.
Rezétte utilise des pseudonymes différents selon le genre de littérature: Ann et Gwen (littérature sentimentale et romans pour enfants), Ilka Legrand (romans policiers), Cécile d'Argel (romans pour enfants). - Elle aurait également utilisé les pseudonymes Marc Roger et Pierre Lacombe (cit. BNF).

En 1970 avec sa fille Claude et deux amies elle fut présente à la réunion annuelle du Clan Mac Pherson à Badenoch, Invernessshire, Scotland, pour faire des reserches historiques sur les Clans ecossais et sur Prince Charles Edward Stuart. Sa presence fut notée dans la revue du Clan, Creag Dhubh no23 qui écrit
"We are hearing a great deal of news coming from Brussels, the capital of Belgium. We were charmed to receive into our midst two delightful ladies from Belgium at our 1970 Rally. Both authors, Carmen d'Aubrey comes from Brussels and Ilka Rezette from rural Belgium. We received a letter and a manuscript from these ladies describing our 1970 Rally in delightfully fresh terms as seen through the eyes of others. Various factors, not least the postal strike, disorganised things to such an extent that we must hold over their contribution till Creag Dhubh 1972. Such is their obvious warmth and affection for our clan that we hope that perhaps, in time, they might be able to be awarded the same honours as accorded to Professor Julius Pokorny in last year's issue".


Olivia, ma petite fille, ill. G. Pichard, 1957 & (NBS no 15, & 1960)

1957
1960

ARMIE
(French b. Cherbourg 1889 — d. Paris XIII, 1 November 1958)
(anagram of Marie, Pseud. de Mlle Marie Louise Pauline Angéla Tassin, a.k.a. Tassin de Tassin)


Blanche de Rosemai, Ill. Manon Iessel, 1955

1955

d'ASQUE CLAIRE
(b. Asque ?-?)
Pseud of a writer born in Asque (Mid-Pyrenées)

Bertier Françoise: Illustratrice
Also known as Françoise Jacques-Bertier, she was for many years a regular illustrator for La Semaine de Suzette

(drawing from Le Livre de Suzette, 1951)


Fleur de plein vent, Ill. Françoise Bertier, 1953

1953

AUBERT, JEAN de
Pseud. de Denyse Renaud

La Lande aux fées, ill. A. Pécoud, 1954

1954

BARDY, FRANCE de

Active from 1936 to early '70s
Children writer but mostly translator of American & English authors (Anya Seton, Taylor Caldwell, Alcott & als). Scriptwriter various BD series for Gordinne et others.

Edith Follet - Illustratrice
Edith Amandine Marie FOLLET
(b.Rennes 12 May 1899-d. Paris 9 March 1990)

Fille de Anasthase, directeur de l'école de Medicine de Rennes a été l'épouse de Louis-Ferdinand Céline de 1919 à 1926. Ils eurent une fille, Colette. Après Céline elle se remaria avec un officier et eu un fils.
D'abord illustratrice pour Nilsson, à partir de 1941 elle collabore avec les pubblications Gautier-Languereau et notamment La Semaine de Suzette.

(drawing from Le Livre de Suzette, 1951)

Les Cinq Mac Dougall, couv. TOLMER, ill. M. de La Pintière, 1950, FFcover adapted from "The Five McDougall" by William Black
Les Mystères du Roscoët, ill. Edith Follet, 1955


1955
1950

BELLOCQ LOUISE
(French, b. Pau, 20 Jan 1909 - d.>1968)
pseud of Marie-Louise BOUDAT

She was educated at the Lycée de Pau and apart the war years she lived all her life in Pau, rue Galos 17, where she ran a boarding-house.
She started her career writing poetry: Eve (Prix Sully Prudhomme 1932), Cybèle (1936).
Poet laureate by Académie des jeux floraux, concours 1932.
She made her debut as a novelist with Le passager de la Belle Aventure in 1952 followed by the better known La Porte retombée, Prix Femina 1960, in which she spoke of the Jews in terms which did not please a member of the jury, Beatrix Beck, Gide's former secretary, but Dominique Rolin defended Bellocq and Beck resigned in protest (ajcarchives.org).
Prix exceptionnel du roman pyrénéen for La Ferme de l'Ermitage, 1956.
In 1961 she was awarded the Médaille d'honneur de la Littérature d'Aquitaine.
She spent her war time years in Bretagne where she set her third novel Mesdames Minnignan. She developed a passion for the sea.
Bellocq was the surname of her grand-mother.

Le Passager de la "Belle-Aventure" 1952 ill. M Iessel (NBS no 25, 1961, Ill. G. Pichard)

1952
1961
BERNAGE BERTHE
(Paris, b. 11 Aug 1886 - d. 2 May 1972)

Pseud.: Bettine.
Celebrated novel writer and journalist. After the NBS, Giboulée was re-printed in 1967 as "Série Giboulée" which includes also Giboulée en Hollande.


Full biography in:
Anna Levi,
Storia della Biblioteca dei Miei Ragazzi

Pontedera, Bibliografia&Informazione, 2012

Mademoiselle Giboulée, ill. Pierre Couronne,
(NBS n° 3, 1959 & 1961)
L'Intrépide Giboulée, ill. Pierre Couronne
(NBS no 13, 1960)
Giboulée au Pays Basque, ill. Pierre Couronne
(NBS no 29, 1961)
Giboulée et le fantôme, ill. Pierre Couronne,
(NBS no 43, 1962)
Giboulée sur la Côte d'Azur, ill. Pierre Couronne
(Bibliothèque Bleue no 56 1963)
Giboulée antiquaire, ill. Pierre Couronne
(Bibliothèque Bleue no 62,1964
Giboulée en Bretagne, ill. Pierre Couronne
(Bibliothèque Bleue, no 68, 1965









Histoire d'un Pierrot et des trois petites filles,
ill. H. Morin, 1928, 1928 hardback, 1950 (5th ed.)
La Tutelle de cousine Linotte, ill. H. Thiriet, 1931 & 1938 & 1950 (ill Hermet)
Il était un petit page, ill H. Morin, 1932, 1950
Une petite fille tombée de la Lune, ill. J. Duché, 1937, 1939, 1949 (3rd ed.)

L'Homme au chapeau gris, ill. Manon Iessel, 1954

1928
1950

1931
1950

1932
1950

1939
1954

BESBRE PIERRE

Pseudonym de Mme Françoise Soulié née Pernin.



1940
1942



La Petite voiture peinte, ill. Henry Morin,
n° 8, 1933, 1945 (2nd ed.)
Le Sort de Tête rousse, ill. Le Rallic, 1936 (no 9) 1949 (4th ed.)
Le Cheval aux petits yeux, ill. F. Lorioux, 1940, 1942*
*war edition - cover: Il était un Petit Page

1933
1945

1936

BLONAY PAULETTE
BLONAY PAULETTE MARIE
French (Le Genest, Mayenne, 4/9/1912 — d. Paris 1990?)

Rédactrice en chef de Fillette de l'après-guerre à 1968, et scénariste.
Séries réalisées sur les dessins d'Al. G. (Gérard Alexandre): Aggie et
L' Espiègle Lili
- 1935 à 1984

Translated in Turkish: "Ömerin bisikleti" & "Kücük Ömer ormanda"



Don Cinet Mène l'Enquête (NBS no 51, 1963 ill. P. Bertrand)


1963

BONZON PAUL JACQUES
(b. Sainte-Marie-Du-Mont, Normandie 31/8/1908 - d. Valence, Drôme 24/9/1978)

Read the full biography by Serge.

Children's mystery adventures writer. Best known for his long series of adventure books called Les six Compagnons.
Prix du salon de l'enfance (Jeunesse) 1958.



Loutsi-chien, ill. G. de Sainte-Croix (NBS no 28, 1961)

1961

BOURCET MARGUERITE
(b.Dole 26 Aout 1899 - d. Paris 18 Juin 1938)


Full biography in:
Anna Levi,
Storia della Biblioteca dei Miei Ragazzi

Pontedera, Bibliografia&Informazione, 2012


1931
1935












L'Héritière de Ferlac, ill. F. Raffin, 1922, 1st ed. 1939
L'Étoile de Navailles, ill. F. Raffin, 1925, 1937
Princesse de neige, ill. R. de La Nézière, 1931, 1935

1922
1939

1925
1937

BRAZIL ANGELA
(British, b. 30/11/1868 - d. 1947)
Popular author of girls school adventures.
(see various web-biographies)


Marie France - Translator
French, 3/6/1904 - 28/7/1994)
Pseudonyme de Françoise Sébileau, première dirigeante nationale du mouvement Ames vaillantes (now L'Action Catholique des Enfants, un mouvement chrétien d'éducation populaire s'adressant aux enfants et aux jeunes de 5 à 15 ans)
A également écrit dans le journal "Ames vaillantes" sous les pseudonymes "Claude Falaise" et "Noël Aubled" (BNF)


Une école dans un manoir, ill. M. Berty 1936
Adapté par Marie France du roman anglais The Manor House School, Blackie & Son Ltd, 1911



1936

BRECK VIVIAN
(American, b. San Francisco 5/1/1895 - d. 1992)
Pseud.of Vivian Gurney Breckenfeld

Vivian Gurney Breckenfeld. Born January 5, 1895, in San Francisco, California.

Daughter of Gilbert (a mining engineer) and Leonide (Cook) Gurney; married Elmer Ackley Breckenfeld (retired from printing business) July 24, 1917. Three children: Gurney, Robert, Rule. Educated Vassar College (B.A.), 1915; University of California (M.A.) 1917. Teacher of physical education , English and history (1926-1929). Writer under the pseudonym Vivian Breck. Lived at 34 Oak Ridge rd Berkeley California (1930) Carmel Valley Manor, Carmel, California (1979) (from Something About the Author, 1981). Bibliography: see Library of Congress. A biography of Breckenfeld is included in Contemporary Authors, a reference volume published by Thompson Gale, 2006.

1959

 

Gentiane des neiges, ill. Manon Iessel, 1957 (NBS no 11, & ll. de G. de Sainte-Croix, 1960)


1957
1960

BROWN PAMELA (BEATRICE)
(British, b. Colchester 31/12/1924- d.1989)
(see various web-biographies)

Children's author. Television producer.
Daughter of Frederick Leonard and Sepha (Sale) Brown.
Educated at Colchester Bounty High School, Brecon.
County School, & RADA.
Married Donald Masters actor in 1949.

She wrote her first novel The Swish of the Curtain (1941), at 14. Trained as an actress at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, she worked on the stage as ‘Mela Brown'. She wrote several sequels to her first book, and other children's novels; for some years she produced children's programmes for BBC television. BBC Children's Programmes. 1950-55. Scottish TV . 1957-8
(credits:www.collectingbooksandmagazines.com & googlebook & The Author's & Writer's Who's who, 1971).

En route pour Singapour, Ill. Françoise Bertier, (NBS, no 44, 1962)
Orig. Title: As far as Singapore, 1959: Traduit de l'anglais par Yvonne Girault

1962
Ed White Lion , 1973

BRU MADELEINE
(see DAVET MICHEL)
La Maison des originaux, ill. F. Bertier, 1948

1948

ANDRE BRUYERE

Full biography in:
Anna Levi,
Storia della Biblioteca dei Miei Ragazzi

Pontedera, Bibliografia&Informazione, 2012


1921
1930

1924
1932

1929
1941

1942
1947

1948
1951
La Conquête du dragon, ill. H. Avelot, 1919,(1re série) 1948 No 10 Bibliotheque de Suzette
Les Robinsons de guerre, ill. Lhuer, 1921, 1923, 1930, no 18
Bleus contre Verts, ill. H. Avelot couv. Tolmer, 1924 (ill Avélot) & 1932 & 1948(5th ed.)
Le Trésor merveilleux, n° 21, 1926, Ill. Henry Morin, 1929 & 1935
Les Royaumes de la reine Marguerite, ill. Le Rallic, 1929 & 1934 (no 19)
La Tribu des lapins sauvages, ill. H. Thiriet, 1st ed. 1932, 1932(paperback)
La Grande aventure de quatre diablotins,
ill. de Henry Morin n° 17, 1926, 1933, 1936, 1939
Les Demoiselles de l'Arc-en-Ciel, ill. M. Hermet, 1934 & 1949 (4th ed.)
La Vilaine, ill. M. Hermet, 1935, 1935ppbk, 1947
Les Robinsons de la montagne, ill. M. Hermet, 1942
Autour d'un collier, ill. M. Berty, 1947 & Editions du Triomphe, 1995
Nôtre petite princesse de misère, ill. André Pecoud, 1948
L'Impératrice jaune, ill. André Pecoud, 1951

1948
1929

1932
1932


1936
1926

1934
1947

Editions du Triomphe, 1995

CALVI NANO
(b. 1902- d?)
possibly a pseudo?
Le Trésor des Pajarski seems just about all Calvi has written.
(LoC)


Le Trésor des Pajarski, ill. Claire Marchal, 1956

1956

CAMY GENEVIÈVE, de
(b. Bayonne?)
Tzénouvia, Ill. Edith Follet, 1955

1955

CARNAC M. de

Full biography in:
Anna Levi,
Storia della Biblioteca dei Miei Ragazzi

Pontedera, Bibliografia&Informazione, 2012

1926
1935


La Jolie dame en rose, ill. H. Morin, 1932
La Petite babouche d'argent, ill. René Giffey, n° 24, 1934, 1934dustjacket.
Le Poids d'un Secret, ill. R de la Nézière, n° 25, 1926, 1935, (hardback), 1935dustjacket


1932
1934

CARTER BRUCE
(UK, b. Brighton 1922 - 1999)

Pseud. of Richard Alexander Hough
Other pseud.: Elizabeth Churchill, Pat Strong
Historian, writer of seafaring fiction stories and children adventures. Publisher.

As part of his research on the biography of Captain James Cook, published Hodder & Stoughton 1995, Hough consulted numerous archives and traced Cook's travels from Alaska to Tasmania, visiting many of the Pacific islands, including the Hawaiian archipelago where Cook met his death.

1)"Richard Alexander Hough was born in Brighton, Sussex, England in 1922 and served as a pilot in the Royal Air Force during World War II. He worked as an editor, then as a manager of a publishing firm. From 1955-1970 he was an editor of children's books; during that period also began his career as a writer of books for both adults and children. His work falls into areas that he found interesting as a child: flying, maritime history, science fiction, animals, and adventure" (from Something About the Author, 1976)
2) British naval historian, biographer and children's writer. After a long career in publishing, Hough became a full-time writer in 1970. He wrote nearly 100 books including The Battle of Jutland (1969), Captain Bligh and Mr Christian (1972), Great admirals (1977), Mountbatten: hero of our time (1980) and Captain James Cook (1994)
(text from National Library of Australia).

 

Les Robinsons de l'Ile-Mystère, ill. Pierre Joubert, Traduction de Yvonne Girault (NBS no 17, 1960)
Orig. Title: Target Island,



1960
Ed. Book Club,1950
CASTÉRAN MARIE-CLAUDE
pseud de Maggie Salcedo (Salzedo)


MAGGIE SALCEDO - illustrator
(b. Paris, 11 May 1890 — d. Paris, 15 Nov. 1959)
Le Voilier mystérieux, ill. Maggie Salcédo 1954
La Robe de Bal, ill. Maggie Salcédo, 1955

1954
1955

CATALANY MYRIAM

Full biography in:
Anna Levi,
Storia della Biblioteca dei Miei Ragazzi

Pontedera, Bibliografia&Informazione, 2012


1931
1943

1928
1934

1922
1932

La Petite marquise de Karabat, ill. GUYDO, 1927, 1931 & 1943 couvert TOLMER.
Le Voyage de Mimose, ill. R de la Nézière, 1920 (2me série), 1928, 1934 (no 31), 1940*
*war edition cover of La mysterieuse disparition de Sir Jerry
Les Filles de Barbe-Bleus, ill. R de la Nézière suivi de L'étoile de Mouvantes, ill. Hérouard, 1922, 1932
Le Regne de Cendrillon, en marge de Perrault, 1924, 1940, 1947(7th ed.) couv. TOLMER
P'tit-Oiseau, ill. Henry Morin, 1929, 1931, 1934

1924
1940


1940

1931,
1934

 

CHANCEL JULES
(b. Marseille 1867 - d. Versailles 18 January 1944)

Son of Ludovic Auguste négociant at Marseille and Marie Julie Honorine, Charles-Roux Chancel was born in Marseille on 25 September 1867. He married Claire Elisabeth Madeleine Aragon 26 April 1897. They had six children. One Charles Antoine Ludovic, became ambassador (France Ambassador to Haiti in 1950 and Prague 1961 & other posts); another Jean-Louis Roger became a painter & cartonist-illustrator, stage designer; in 1945 he was awarded the Ordre de la Libération the second highest French honor after the Légion d'Honneur.

Chancel could trace his ancestry back to the XVI Century: one of his ancestors born in 1714 was " Maître-apothicaire du Roi".

Chancel combined a successfull career as a playwriter with that of a writer and a journalist.
Amongst the innumerable successful operettas and stage plays he wrote, stands out the 1910 adaptation of Rêve d'un valse by Oscar Strauss and his play The Prince Consort, written with Leon Xanrof, which was filmed in 1929 by Lubitsch as The Love Parade. The film was included in Dictionary of 1,000 best films by by R. A. E. Pickard, 1971.

War correspondant for L'Illustration in the Middle East during WWI. Contributor to La Baionette. Parisian correspondent for La Dépêche du Centre. Founder (with others) of La Maison de La Prese Parisienne. Redacteur en chef de La Sartrhe (1927).
Author of three collection for juveniles: Les Enfants à l'Etranger, Les enfants à travers l'histoire, Les Enfants aux Colonies.
An interesting book by Chancel is Six ans après, un mark=six francs, written in 1929, a reportage on Germany ten years after the end of the Great War.

Bailly Louis - Illustrator
(1875-1958)
Il épousa Hilda Ernst (1877-1968) fille du peintre orientaliste autrichien Rudolf Ernst.

Biblio: Louise Vaquette, Odette, 1903, La fleurette du temple, 1920, Kipling, de Musset Mimi Pinson, 1914, Images d' Epinal, Les Burgraves de Victor Hugo: série de cartes postales illustrées en couleur par L. Bailly sans ni date ni imprimeur au Musée Victor Hugo de Villequier.

(source: Le plaisir du livre et de l'image de Jean-Paul Gourevitch & BNF, & Musée Dept de Villequier & IMDb & genealogy Chancel by Charles DE RAPHELIS SOISSAN)

La Fleurettte du Temple, ill. Louis Bailly, 1919 (1re série, No 4 ) & 1936 & 1942* & 1947 (ill. TOLMER), 1950 (8th ed.)
*war edition: cover La mystérieuse disparition de Sir Jerry

1919

1942
1947

CHAURAND FRANÇOISE-THERESE
(b. 23 /2/ 1925 Serrières en Chantagne (Savoie) - d. Chatte Isère, 11/6/2006)

Daughter of Paul Chaurand and Marguerite de Crécy. She had an older brother, François (b. 07/05/1919 - d.23/04/1920), who died of Spanish flu.
Her father died in 1926, just one year after her birth and she was brought up by her mother (who never remarried) and her extended family.
Nicknamed Ninon, she made her secondary studies in Paysac (Ardèche). After WWII she entered as editor at Bayard Presse where she spent all her working career. Lived in Paris most of her life in rue Bréa, with her aunt Jeanne, her mother's sister. In 1988 she retired to Chatte, rue des Jardins, where she died unmarried in 2006.
Great lover of animals especially horses for many years she constantly attended horse shows where she could be seen working as a voluntary groom.

(source: website de Crécy:
F. T. Chaurand @ www.genecrecy.fr/cre_gene/ninon.htm)


Maison-forte, ill. Manon Iessel, 1949
Prix Semaine de Suzette, 1948


1949

CHOSALLAND ANDRÉ

In 1935 an article called Paul Baldassera: La Colonne Corinthienne by André Chosalland is published in Cyprus Letters, a monthly magazine of literature and arts edited in Nicosia, Cyprus.
Paul Baldassera (aka Paul Valdaseridis (b. Larnaca 1892-died Athens 1972) was a Greek writer poet who lived in France until 1941.
In 1956 André Chosalland signs in Lisette a short story called Vendetta Corse. Active in Bernadette in 1957-1958.
MADEMOISELLE "PROMET-TOUT", UNE RUSE DE DUGUESDIN, etc.
Le trésor des Lusignan is Chosalland's only bibliographic record (BNF). It was translated in Italian as II tesoro di Cipro, ed. Salani.

Bernadette 1957,1958


Le Trésor des Lusignan, ill. A. Pécoud, 1950


1950

COGAN PAUL
French (b.19/1/1921 - d. 31/1/1976)

Pseudonyme de Claude Appell
Auteur de livres pour la jeunesse. Rédacteur en chef de "Terre des jeunes" de 1949 à 1972 (BNF).
Rédacteur en chef de Franc-jeux (journal de jeunes).
Directeur Collection Série 15, Gautier Languereau.

Pierre Joubert - illustrator
(Paris, 27/6/1910- d. La Rochelle 14/1/2002)

"Pierre Joubert est connu pour avoir été l'illustrateur des scouts, de Bob Morane et de Signe de Piste. Si ces trois piliers de son œuvre ont fait sa notoriété, ils n'en sont pas moins les trois arbres qui cachent la forêt…" (cit. www.signe-de-piste.com)

From Wikipedia:
"Élève de l'École des arts appliqués à Paris à partir de ses 14 ans, il rencontre le scoutisme en 1925. En 1927, Paul Coze le remarque dans un camp-école à Chamarande et l'embauche comme illustrateur de la revue le Scout de France. Il devient alors le dessinateur officiel du mouvement. Il travaille ensuite à la revue L'Illustration, mais a aussi participé à l'illustration des couvertures des volumes de la collection Marabout Junior. Il a également écrit plusieurs livres sur de nombreux sujets (autobiographie, l'héraldique), et dessiné de nombreuses illustrations à caractère religieux, historique et scout, des couvertures de livres, des calendriers etc. Il ne cachait pas avoir été proche dans sa jeunesse des Camelots du Roy et de l'Action française dans les années 1930, tout comme Maurice Blanchot, Claude Roy ou François Mitterrand. Cependant, loin de partager les idées d'extrême-droite, il se situait comme chrétien de gauche, loin de l'univers de certains des auteurs qu'il a illustrés. Sa carrière a duré près de 77 ans, au cours de laquelle il a dessiné plusieurs milliers d'œuvres. Après son mariage, il s'installa sur les hauteurs de Meudon, où il résida jusqu'à la fin de sa vie, partageant son temps entre ses voyages, les Charentes et Meudon."


Les Chevaliers du stade, ill. P. Joubert, 1964 (no 60, Bibliothèque Bleue)
Les Mousquetaires du risque, Ill. G. Pichard, Bibliothèque bleue, no 67, 1965


1964
1965

CORBIE GENEVIÈVE de
(b. Boulogne-sur-mer, 1907 - d. ?)

Active ca 1952-1974.
pseud of Marie Thérèse Huret, Mme Arnauld de Corbie.
Other Pseuds. Geneviève de Champdeniers et Citronnelle.
"...chroniqueur d'Arts ménagers..."
In the '70s she re-edited Le nouveau savoir-vivre: convenances et bonnes manières by Berthe Bernage.
In 1931 she married at Nôtre Dame de Boulogne, Arnauld Henri Louis Joseph de Corbie (1907-1948) a lawyer by profession; he was a writer (es. Monsieur le chevalier Jean Bart, Corsaire du Roi Soleil, Éditions Alsatia, 1945) and a journalist: copy-editor, Figaro, editor France Magazine. At the time of his untimely death aged 47. he was editor-in-chief (Paris) Voix du Nord. He was a friend of Jean-Louis Dubreuil who became his brother in law upon his marriage with Brigitte, sister of Marie Thérèse (together they wrote under the pseudo Claude Campagne).
G. de Corbie started to publish after the death of her husband initially contributing to Les Veillées des Chaumières (es. 1952). She took her pseud. from Geneviève de Corbie (b 1894) a first cousin of her husband.



Le Cygne de Chantepie, ill. Gloesner, 1956

1956

COWEN WILLIAM JOYCE
American (New York 21 Dec 1886- England, 1964).

William J. Cowen served in the Canadian Expeditionary Force in WWI, and in France with the Fort Garry Horse. He achieved the rank of Lieutenant & was wounded three times during the course of the war. He was awarded the Military Cross presented by King George V for his actions at the battle of Cambrai, 20 November 1917. After the war, he went to Russia, possibly in the service of the US government, where he was captured by the Bolsheviks, and sentenced to death for being a "spy, bourgeois and a speculator". Returning to the USA, he wrote several books and short stories, notably "Man With Four Lives", which has scenes derived from his war experiences in France, and "They Gave Him a Gun".
In 1926 he married Lenore Jackson Coffee, (1896-1984) succesfull Hollywood screenwriter and director who, from 1910 to the late Fifties directed & scripted more than 80 films. She was a descendant of U.S. General John Coffee, Chief of Staff to Andrew Jackson at the Battle of New Orleans in 1814 (abridged TEXT from gordon.crossley@compaq.com, ©IMDb.com).

Cowen was introduced to the world of cinema by his wife becoming also scriptwriter and film director. His scripts include: "Good Girls Go to Paris" (1939), "Blind Alibi" (1938) and "They Gave Him a Gun" (1937) adapted from his book by the same title.
Beside his books he is remembered for having directed in 1933 a successful film adaptation of "Oliver Twist", the first sound version of Dickens masterpiece.

Coffe and Cowen had a daughter, Toni Cowen and a son Garry Cowen.

L'Enlévement de Noël, ill. Gloesner, 1957 (& NBS no 18, 1960)
orig.title: Little Friend a Christmas Story, London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1953


1957
1960

Hodder & Stoughton, 1953
The story of Paulette Duval who had to move, with her mother, from the farm
in Normandy to the bare room in Co-operative Three

CRISENOY MARIA, de
(b. Cherbourg, Manche 16 Nov. 1882 - d. Paris, 1965)

Born Maria Loysel, Mme la baronne Henry de Crisenoy.

Daughter of Jules and Marie Letouzey (or Touzé), the second of four children (Charles, Maria, Jeanne Mathilde Marie and Paul). Her father was a doctor, Professor at the Faculty of Medicine in Paris. He published a study on the use of the oxygen in the treatment of asphyxia and poisoning. He died in 1890 at the age of forty. In 1903, Marie married her contemporary Henry de Crisenoy (b. 28 Sept. 1882 - d. 11 Feb 1930), issued from a well connected aristocratic family from Cherbourg of Army Officers and Governments Officials. (Marie-Marcelle Gigault de Crisenoy Baronne Frédy de Coubertin who died in 1907, was the mother of Pierre de Coubertin; another de Crisenoy married a Montesquiou).
Though she had a book published by Mame in 1925, Maria became a full time writer after the death of her husband. She appears in La Croix in 1933 with Vieux Macaron. She soon became quite popular, especially after receiving a prize from the Académie Française for Au pays des sortilèges, 1935, the biography of Jean de Britto. "Qui ne connaît Mme de Crisenoy?" wrote La Croix in 1937.
She wrote various biographies notably one on Antoine de Saint-Exupéry; Poète et aviateur, Paris, Spes. 1948, another on Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza, le héros du Congo, Paris, Bonne Presse. The book was supported by the personal preface of Thérèse Savorgnan de Brazza who had given Maria access to her husband's papers.
Leur ami, Kid... Roman by baronne Maria de Crisenoy, ed Alsatia, 1946.

(see: Dict. des écrivains français pour la jeunesse 1914-1991 / Nic Diament, 1993)


Les Bandits de la Dorothée, ill. C.Pichard (NBS no 46, 1962)


1962
backcover
CRUYSMANS CÉCILE
(Belgian, b. Antwerp ca 1906 - d ?)

The youngest of seven children. Cruysmans was the daughter of Maurice, a lawyer and Vice President of the Belgian Court of First Instance and Marie-Henriette Van Put.
In 1933 she married Werner GEERINCKX (b. 7 Oct 1904) issued from a wealthy family of cotton spinners and manufacturer. His father Léon owned the Castle of Ter Linden, which remained in the family until the Sixties.
The couple settled in Aalst where in 1935 they lived at Gentsesteenweg, 150.
They had five children.

Cruysmans' other books include:
Les aventures de Bibi-Fricot et de Titi-le-Radis, 1938 - La Face de la terre, 1943 - Le Chant de la colombe, 1943

Collaboration: Fossettes Le Grand Hebdomadaire illustré de la Femme et de la Famille (es 1944).

Catherine et le bateau fantôme [Le Château sur la montagne.] ill. A. Pécoud, 1947

1947


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