Isabelle Sandy

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Isabelle Sandy before 1928

Isabelle Sandy (a pseudonym; 15 June 1884, Cos, Ariège – 8 May 1975) was a French poet, writer and radio presenter, best known for her regionalism.[1] She was awarded the Prix Montyon by the Académie française for Chantal Daunoy.[1] It has been noted that she was one of the few women writers in the interwar period.[2]

Bibliography

  • L'Ève douloureuse, 1912
  • Chantal Daunoy, 1917
  • Maryla. Roman d'une polonaise, 1922
  • Andorra ou Les hommes d’airain, 1923. American edition: Andorra: A Novel, Boston, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1924 (translated by Mathilde Monnier & Florence Donnell White ; introduction by Rudyard Kipling. British edition: Andorra, London, Geoffrey Bles, 1925
  • L'homme et la sauvageonne, 1925
  • Llivia ou Les cœurs tragiques, 1926. American edition: Wild Heart, Boston, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1926 (translated by Charles Miner Thompson
  • Les soutanes vertes, 1927
  • Kaali, 1931
  • La vierge au collier, 1931
  • L'homme qui fabriquait de l'or, 1932
  • Un homme à la mer, 1932
  • La soutane sanglante, 1935
  • L'enchantement, 1938
  • Sang et or ou La paix par les femmes, 1945
  • Printemps de feul, 1946
  • Les grandiose visions d'Anne-Catherine Emmerich, 1948
  • La tempête sur l'amour, 1948
  • La maison des femmes seules, 1949
  • Trencabel, pyrénéen, 1955
  • De granit et de pourpre : le Cardinal Saliège, 1957 (with Marguerite Dufaur)
  • Je n'ai jamais vu Dieu, 1959
  • Montségur temple cathare : son histoire, son message, 1962
  • Madonne aux cheveux blancs

References

  1. ^ a b Frédérique Chevillot, Anna Norris, Des femmes écrivent la guerre, Editions Complicités, 2007, page 90 [1]
  2. ^ David Coward, History of French Literature: From Chanson de Geste to Cinema, WileyBlackwell, 2003, page 493 [2]
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