René Bazin


René François Nicolas Marie Bazin was a French novelist.

Biography

Born at Angers, he studied law in Paris, and on his return to Angers became Professor of Law in the Catholic university. In 1876, Bazin married Aline Bricard. The couple had two sons and six daughters. He contributed to Parisian journals a series of sketches of provincial life and descriptions of travel, and wrote Stephanette, but he made his reputation with Une Tache d'Encre, which received a prize from the Academy. He was admitted to the Académie française on 28 April 1904, to replace Ernest Legouvé.
René Bazin was a Knight Commander of the Order of St. Gregory the Great, and was President of the Corporation des Publicistes Chretiens.

Works

Other novels:
  • Les Noëllet
  • La Sarcelle Bleue
  • Madame Corentine
  • Humble Amour
  • De toute son âme
  • La Terre qui Meurt, a picture of the decay of peasant farming set in La Vendée; it was an indirect plea for the development of provincial France
  • Les Oberlé, a story which was dramatized and acted in the following year
  • L'Âme Alsacienne
  • Donatienne
  • L'Isolée
  • Le blé qui lève
  • Mémoires d'une vieille fille
  • La Barrière
  • Davidée Birot
  • Gingolph l'Abandonné
  • La Closerie de Champsdolent
  • Récits du Temps de Guerre
  • Les Nouveaux Oberlé, regarded as a masterpiece by some
  • Le Mariage de Mlle. Gimel; La Barriére; La Douce France; Histoire de vingt quatre sonnettes; and Ferdinand Jacques Hervé Bazin
  • Charles de Foucauld, Explorateur
A volume of Questions littéraires et sociales appeared in 1906. He also wrote books of travel, including a À l'aventure, Sicile, Terre d'Espagne, and Croquis de France et d'Orient. Nord-Sud Amérique, etc.. Bazin is known to English and American readers for rendering the Italy of his time, The Italians of To-Day.
After 1914 he published two volumes of war sketches, Pages religieuses and Aujourd'hui et demain.