Guy de Maupassant
Guy de Maupassant
Guy de Maupassant, né le 5 août 1850 au château de Miromesnil près de Tourville-sur-Arques (France) et mort le 6 juillet 1893 dans le 16e arrondissement de Paris, est un écrivain et journaliste littéraire français. Lié à Gustave Flaubert et à Émile Zola, Maupassant a marqué la littérature française par ses six romans, dont *Une vie* en 1883, *Bel-Ami* en 1885, *Pierre et Jean* en 1887-1888, et surtout par ses nouvelles (parfois intitulées contes) comme *Boule de Suif* en 1880, les *Contes de la bécasse* (1883) ou Le Horla (1887). Ces œuvres retiennent l’attention par leur force réaliste, la présence importante du fantastique et par le pessimisme qui s’en dégage le plus souvent, mais aussi par la maîtrise stylistique. La carrière littéraire de Maupassant se limite à une décennie — de 1880 à 1890 — avant qu’il ne sombre peu à peu dans la folie et ne meure peu avant l'âge de 43 ans. Reconnu de son vivant, il conserve un renom de premier plan, renouvelé encore par les nombreuses adaptations cinématographiques de ses œuvres. ---------- (Henry René Albert) Guy De Maupassant is generally considered to be the greatest French writer of short stories. One account says the location of his birth was the Château de Miromesnil, in Dieppe, though this is not certain. His paternal ancestors were of the minor aristocracy, and his maternal grandfather, Paul Le Poittevin, was Gustave Flaubert's godfather. His parents separated when he was 11 years old. Maupassant was gifted with a photographic memory, which aided him in recollecting events and characters for his stories. As a teenager, Maupassant was shown, by the poet Algernon Swinburne (1837-1909), a mummified hand. He used this haunting image in his early short story La Main Ecorchée (1875). In 1869 Maupassant started to study law in Paris, but soon, at age 20, he volunteered to serve in the army during Franco-Prussian War. After his return to Paris, Maupassant joined the literary circle of Gustave Flaubert, who introduced him to some of the leading writers of his day, including Emile Zola, Ivan Turgenev, and Henry James. Flaubert saw Maupassant regularly and schooled him in the craft of being a writer. From 1872 to 1880, Maupassant worked as a civil servant, first at the ministry of maritime affairs, then at the ministry of education. Toward the end of this time, Maupassant published his first poetry, Des Vers (1880). Later the same year he published his short story masterpiece, "Boule de Suif" (Ball of Fat) in the anthology Soirées de Medan (1880), edited by Emile Zola. The story, set during the Franco-Prussian War, is about passengers on a coach, one of whom is a well-known prostitute, nicknamed 'Boule de Suif.' The story later inspired director John Ford's Western film Stagecoach (1945). During the 1880s Maupassant created some 300 short stories, six novels, three travel books, and one volume of verse. In tone, his tales were marked by precision of style and a range of expression. Although his stories range from moving drama to sometimes bizarre comedy, it is his macabre horror stories that have received much attention. Among Maupassant's best known books is Une Vie (A Woman's Life, 1883), about the frustrating existence of a Norman wife, Bel-Ami (1885), which depicts an unscrupulous journalist. Pierre et Jean (1888) was a psychological study of two brothers. The novel was thought to be immoral, according to the classic definition, because the hero succeeds by doing wrong. Maupassant's most upsetting horror story, "Le Horla" (1887) (not to be confused with another of Maupassant's stories called "The Trip of Le Horla", which is about a hot air balloon), was about vampire-like ghouls, madness and suicide. Maupassant had suffered from syphilis since his 20's, which caused him neurological and mental problem in his later years, and which undoubtedly accounts for his shortened lifespan. Some critics have alleged that Maupassant's developing illness can be seen through a growing preocuppation with mental illness in his stories. However, the theme of mental illness is present even in his first collection, La Maison Tellier (1881), published at the height of his health. Maupassant's horror fiction consists of some 39 stories, only a tenth of his total work. A recurring theme in these is madness: "A Queer Night in Paris" is a paranoid nightmare: its narrator feels compelled to walk the streets. In "Who Knows?" the subject suffers from delusions about the furniture in his house. "Diary of a Madman" is a story about a judge, who commits murder, just for the experience, and condemns an innocent man to death for the crime. "The Inn" has many similarities with Stephen King's novel The Shining. His story, "The Hand," based on his teenage recollection, has inspired later authors and movie directors. Maupassant's writing is sometimes compared with that of Edgar Allen Poe. On January 2, 1892, Maupassant tried to commit suicide by cutting his throat and was committed to the celebrated private asylum of Dr. Esprit Blanche at Passy, in Paris, where he died next year. Maupassant's style has been imitated by countless writers, and his influence can be seen on such masters of the short story as W. Somerset Maugham and O. Henry. [Source][1] [1]: http://www.classicallibrary.org/maupassant/index.htm
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- Image source: Open LibrarySS
Selected Stories
cover - Image source: Open LibraryB
Bel-Ami
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Short Fiction
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Boule de Suif
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La noche de la verdad
cover - Image source: Open LibraryLV
La Vénus d'Ille et autres nouvelles fantastiques
cover - Image source: Open LibraryLN
Lecture Nouvelles de Maupassant - niveau A + CD audio
cover - Image source: Open LibraryLS
La Sicile
cover - Image source: Open LibraryHD
Histoires douces-amères
cover - Image source: Open LibraryAP
A Parisian Affair and Other Stories
cover - Image source: Open LibrarySS
Selected Stories
cover - Image source: Open LibraryBA
Bel Ami; or, The History of a Scoundrel
cover - Image source: Open LibraryOS
Original Short Stories, Volume XIII
cover - Image source: Open LibraryT
Toparlak
cover - Image source: Open LibraryLP
La Parure / The Necklace - Ilya Frank's Reading Method
cover - Image source: Open LibraryLP
Le Port / The Port - Ilya Frank's Reading Method
cover - Image source: Open LibraryCD
Contes de la becada
cover - Image source: Open LibraryEP
El placer
cover - Image source: Open LibraryEP
El placer
cover - Image source: Open LibraryIV
Invisibles visiteurs
cover - Image source: Open LibraryTW
The Wimbourne Book of Victorian Ghost Stories
cover - Image source: Open LibraryLL
LASTING LOVE
cover - Image source: Open LibraryTS
THE STORY OF A FARM GIRL
cover - Image source: Open LibraryLS
Librivox Short Story Collection 092
cover
Works in catalog
Quick navigation into the work-level grouping pages behind the featured books.
- Open Work
Selected Stories
- Open Work
Bel-Ami
- Open Work
Short Fiction
- Open Work
Boule de Suif
- Open Work
La noche de la verdad
- Open Work
La Vénus d'Ille et autres nouvelles fantastiques
- Open Work
Lecture Nouvelles de Maupassant - niveau A + CD audio
- Open Work
La Sicile
- Open Work
Histoires douces-amères
- Open Work
A Parisian Affair and Other Stories
- Open Work
Selected Stories
- Open Work
Bel Ami; or, The History of a Scoundrel
- Open Work
Original Short Stories, Volume XIII
- Open Work
Toparlak
- Open Work
La Parure / The Necklace - Ilya Frank's Reading Method
- Open Work
Le Port / The Port - Ilya Frank's Reading Method
- Open Work
Contes de la becada
- Open Work
El placer
- Open Work
El placer
- Open Work
Invisibles visiteurs
- Open Work
The Wimbourne Book of Victorian Ghost Stories
- Open Work
LASTING LOVE
- Open Work
THE STORY OF A FARM GIRL
- Open Work
Librivox Short Story Collection 092