Thierry Sandre

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Thierry Sandre (* as Charles Moulié May 9, 1891 in Bayonne , † October 11, 1950 in Bouchemaine ) was a French writer. In 1924 he received the Prix ​​Goncourt for the trilogy of novels Le Chèvrefeuille, Le purgatoire, Le chapitre XIII .

Sandre was an expert in the literature of the 16th century and also translated from Greek, Latin and Arabic. Before the First World War he was Pierre Louÿs' secretary . During the First World War he was a German prisoner of war for a long time. In 1919 he was a founding member of the Association des écrivains combattants (Society of Writers Who Had Been Soldiers) and was co-editor of the five-volume anthology des écrivains morts à la guerre of authors who died in the First World War. In 1936 he became a member of the Tertians with the Dominicans in Paris. In 1940 he was a soldier again and briefly until 1941 as a prisoner of war. He was a supporter of the Vichy regime and therefore on a list of banned writers in France after the war, but was then rehabilitated.

He also published under the pen name Jean Dumoulin and under his original name Charles Moulié.

In addition to novels, he published essays and poetry.

Works

As Charles Moulié:

  • Les Mignardises (1909)
  • En sourdine (1910)
  • Poésies de Makoko Kangourou (1910, with Marcel Prouille, a pseudonym of Marcel Ormoy).

As Thierry Sandre:

  • Le Tombeau de Renée Vivien (1910)
  • Les Poésies de Makoko Kangourou (1910) (with Marcel Ormoy)
  • Le Fer et la Flamme (1919)
  • Apologie pour les nouveaux riches (1920)
  • Fleurs du désert (1921)
  • Apologie pour les nouveaux riches (1921)
  • Les Épigrammes de Rufin (1922)
  • Le Livre des baisers (1922)
  • Sulpicia, Tablettes d'une amoureuse (1922)
  • Joachim du Bellay, les amours de Faustine (1923)
  • Mienne (1923)
  • Le Chèvrefeuille, le Purgatoire, le Chapitre XIII | Le Chèvrefeuille (1924)
  • Panouille (1924)
  • Mousseline (1924)
  • Le Chapitre treize d'Athénée (1924)
  • La Touchante Aventure de Héro et Léandre (1924)
  • L'Histoire merveilleuse de Robert le Diable (1925)
  • Ruffi, les épigrammes d'amour (1925)
  • Le Purgatoire (1925)
  • Cocagne (1926 et 1927)
  • Le Visage de la France: Gascogne, uyenne, Côte d'Argent, Pyrénées, Béarn, Côte basque (1927) (with Pierre Benoit ).
  • Les Yeux fermés (1928)
  • Monsieur Jules (1932)
  • Le Corsaire Pellot qui courut pour le roi, pour la republique et pour l'empereur et qui était Basque (1932)
  • La Chartreuse de Bosserville (1941)
  • Crux, récit scénique de la Passion (1941)
  • INRI, la vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus Christ (1942)
  • Calendrier du désastre d'après les documents allemands (1942)
  • Lettre sans humor à sa Majesté la reine d'Angleterre (1943).

As Jean Dumoulin:

  • Le Pourpre et le Crepe , 1917

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