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François
Mauriac (1885-1970) was born in Bordeaux. His father, a banker, died when
he was eighteen months old, leaving his mother with five children, of
which he was the youngest. François grew up in a closely sheltered world,
first under the protection of his mother, later in a school run by the
Marianites. He studied literature at Bordeaux and Paris but soon became
an independent writer. Les Mainsjointes [Clasped Hands], a collection
of poems that appeared in 1909, aroused some interest, but it was not
until the publication of Le Baiser aux lepreux (1922) [A Kiss for the
Leper] that Mauriac became famous. In 1933, he was elected to the Académie
Française. During the Second World War he lived in occupied territory,
at his estate in Malagar and in Paris, and published Le Cahier noir [The
Black Notebook] under the pseudonym Forez. After the war de Gaulle made
Mauriac a Grand Officer of the Legion of Honour. Apart from his many novels,
Mauriac has published several plays which have been produced by the Comédie
Française. He is also a distinguished journalist and has been an editorial
writer for Figaro.
The «religious» novels of Mauriac have been a puzzle to many critics,
for they abound in evidences of the «dark side of life», and their religious
content is not directly apparent. For instance, Le Desert de l'amour (1925)
[The Desert of Love] portrays the triangle of a woman and her would-be
lovers, father and son, whose «unused» passion, an illusion of escape,
turns into the desert in whose isolation the characters live their frustrated
lives. Other outstanding novels are Thérèse Desqueyroux (1927) [Thérèse],
Le Noeud de vipères (1932) [The Knot of Vipers], La Fin de la nuit (1935)
[The End of the Night], and La Pharisienne (1941) [A Woman of the Pharisees].
His most recent work has been a study of Charles de Gaulle (1964). Mauriac's
complete works were published in twelve volumes between 1950 and 1956.
From Nobel Lectures,
Literature 1901-1967.
François Mauriac
died in 1970.
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