Guy Mazeline (12 April 1900 Le Havre – 25 May 1996 Boulogne-Billancourt) was a French writer, winner of the prix Goncourt in 1932 for his novel Les Loups, surprisingly winning against Voyage au bout de la nuit by Louis-Ferdinand Céline.
He is the son of Alphonse Mazeline and Elise Hélène Suzanne Jaquereau. He married on 18 December 1924, to Claire Louise Dors (7 June 1901 Nevers).[1]
Works
- Piège du démon, 1927
- Porte close, 1928
- Un royaume près de la mer, 1931
- Les Loups, 1932
- Le Capitaine Durban, 1934
- Le Délire, 1935
- Les Îles du matin, 1936
- Bêtafeu, 1937
- Le Panier flottant, 1938
- Scènes de la vie hitlérienne, 1938
- Pied d'alouette, 1941
- La Femme donnée en gages, 1943
- Tony l'accordeur, 1943
- Un dernier coup de griffe, 1944
- Le Souffle de l'été, 1946
- Valfort, 1951
- Chrétienne compagnie, 1958
- Un amour d'Italie, 1967
English Translations
- The wolves; translated from the French by Eric Sutton. New York, The Macmillan company, 1934.
References
- ↑ "Guy Mazeline, Quercinois dans l'Histoire". Archived from the original on 2008-11-16. Retrieved 2010-02-09.
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