Charles Derennes
Charles Derennes was a French novelist, essayist and poet, the winner of the Prix Femina in 1924.
Biography
Derennes was born in Charente, the son of Gustave, a professor of history, and Marthe Cassan, the daughter of a baker. Charles spent his childhood in Villeneuve-sur-Lot. In 1892, he entered the lycee of Talence in the suburbs of Bordeaux. There he met the poet Émile Despax from Dax, and Marcel Gounouilhou, future director of the daily La Petite Gironde with whom he would collaborate.After receiving his baccalaureate in 1899, he went to Paris to prepare the entrance examination to the École Normale Supérieure at Lycée Henri-IV and Lycée Louis-le-Grand from which he was sent back. He attended classes at the Sorbonne, obtained a bachelor's degree in letters in 1903, and frequented literary salons such as that of Anna de Noailles and the poetry evenings of the magazine La Plume at the Caveau du Soleil d'Or.
On May 11, 1909, in Paris he married Rosita Finaly, one of the daughters of Hugo Finaly, founder of the Banque de Paris et des Pays-Bas, which ended in divorce on January 19, 1911. During the Great War, he was a military nurse in southwestern France. He married a second time in Paris on March 23, 1916, with Christiane. In 1917, Derennes settled temporarily in the Landes. From 1905, he was part of the group of writers, including Rosny jeune, Paul Margueritte, and Maxime Leroy, which, at the beginning of the 20th century, made Hossegor known and where he stayed regularly until the early 1920s.
On December 10, 1924, he obtained the Prix Femina for Émile et les autres, third volume of the series Bestiaire sentimental. Appointed a knight of the Legion of Honour on January 4, 1925, he died on April 27, 1930, and was buried in Villeneuve-sur-Lot.
Literary work
Derennes started in the world of letters at a young age, but success came gradually. He published more than fifty books in the twenty-five years of his career, and collaborated at the same time in numerous newspapers and magazines. Critics often praised his workHe is known for his collections of poems: L'Enivrante Angoisse, La Tempête, La Chanson des Deux Jeunes Filles or Perséphone. He also is the author of a volume of Occitan poems, Romivatge, a language he had practiced since his youth.
After L'Amour fessé and Le Peuple du pôle, he published "Parisian" before the war and novels that originally appeared in the weekly La Vie Parisienne: Les Caprices de Nouche, Le Béguin des Muses, Le Miroir des pécheresses, Nique et ses cousines. Subsequently, he published other novels, among which are La Nuit d'été, Cassinou va-t-en guerre, La Petite Faunesse, Le Renard bleu, Mon Gosse..., Ouily et Bibi, Amours basques, Le Pauvre et son chien.
Le Bestiaire sentimental, which was a popular favorite with the public, comprises three volumes: Vie de Grillon, La Chauve-Souris and Émile et les autres. In these stories, he gave tender attention to animals that had populated his universe since childhood.
Works
Poems
- 1904: , Librairie Paul Ollendorff
- 1906: La Tempête, Ollendorff
- 1918: La Chanson des deux Jeunes Filles, À la Belle Édition
- 1920: , Garnier
- 1921: Le Livre d'Annie, François Bernouard
- 1923: La Fontaine Jouvence, Garnier
- 1924: La Princesse, "Les Amis d'Edouard"
- 1924: Romivatge, Samatan, Editorial Occitan, "Amics del Libre Occitan",.
- 1925: Premières poésies, Albert Messein,.
Essays and novels
- 1906: L'Amour fessé, Mercure de France, novel
- 1907: Le Peuple du Pôle, Mercure de France, novel
- 1907: La Vie et la Mort de M. de Tournèves, Éditions Grasset, novel
- 1908: La Guenille, Louis-Michaud, novel
- 1909: Les Caprices de Nouche, Éditions de la Vie Parisienne, novel
- 1912: Le Béguin des Muses, Éditions de la Vie Parisienne, novel
- 1912: Le Miroir des Pécheresses, Louis-Michaud, novel
- 1913: Les Enfants sages, Louis-Michaud, novel
- 1914: Nique et ses Cousines, Louis-Michaud, novel
- 1914: La Nuit d'été, L'Édition, novel
- 1917: Cassinou va-t-en guerre, L'Édition française illustrée, novel
- 1918: Leur tout petit cœur, La Renaissance du Livre, novel
- 1918: Le Pèlerin de Gascogne, L'Édition française illustrée, tales and narrations
- 1918: La Petite Faunesse, L'Édition, novel
- 1919: Les Conquérants d'idoles, L'Édition française illustrée, then Georges-Crès, novel
- 1919: Les Bains dans le Pactole, Albin Michel, novel
- 1920: L'Aventure de Roland Ombreval, poète – 1830, Société anonyme d'édition et de librairie, novel
- 1920: Vie de Grillon, Albin Michel, essay
- 1921: Le Renard bleu, Albin Michel, novel
- 1921: Le Beau Max, Ferenczi, novel
- 1922: La Chauve-Souris, Albin Michel, essay
- 1923: Le Pou et l'Agneau, Ferenczi, novel
- 1923: Mon Gosse..., Baudinière, novel
- 1924: Bellurot, Éditions du Monde moderne, novel
- 1924: Émile et les autres, Albin Michel, essay
- 1925: L'Enfant dans l'herbe, Ferenczi, novel
- 1925: Ouily et Bibi, Albert Messein, novel
- 1925: Le Mirage sentimental, Éditions de la Nouvelle Revue critique,.
- 1925: Gaby, mon amour, Albin Michel, novel
- 1925: Les Petites alliances, Albin Michel, novel
- 1926: La Fortune et le Jeu. Le jeu, les jeux et l'activité humaine, Ed., essay
- 1926: Mouti, chat de Paris, Albin Michel, novel
- 1927: Amours et Crimes, Éditions de France, historical essay
- 1927: Mouti, fils de Mouti, Éditions de la Nouvelle Revue critique, novel
- 1927: Les Cocus célèbres, Éditions de France, historical essay
- 1928: Amours basques, Nouvelle Société d'Édition, novel
- 1928: La Mort du Prince impérial, Hachette, historical essay
- 1928: Les Noces sur la banquise, Éditions de la Nouvelle Revue critique, novel
- 1930: Le Pauvre et son chien, La Renaissance du Livre, novel
- 1930: Dieu, les Bêtes et Nous. Les Porte-Bonheur, Éditions des Portiques, essay
Works written in collaboration
- 1914: La Grande Anthologie, la seule qui ne publie que de l'inédit, Louis-Michaud, s. d., Collections of literary pastiches written in particular in collaboration with Pierre Benoit and Charles Perrot
- 1921: La Pléiade, Librairie de France, collection of poems by comtesse de Noailles, Pierre Camo, Charles Derennes, Joachim Gasquet, Xavier de Magallon, Fernand Mazade, Paul Valéry
- 1921: Journal des Goncours. Mémoires de la vie littéraire par un groupe d'indiscrets. Année 1896, La Renaissance du Livre, s. d., literary pastiche attributed to Pierre Benoit, to which he collaborated closely with other authors such as Léon Deffoux
- 1924: Un train entre en gare, Éditions du Siècle, novel signed Henri Seguin, a literary mystification to which Pierre Benoit, Tristan Derème and other authors also collaborated
- 1925: Le Jocond, Éditions du Siècle, another novel signed Henri Seguin, mystification by the same
- 1927: La Promenade Euskadienne. Notes et Souvenirs du Pays basque, 1892-1927, in Le Pays basque, by Charles Derennes, François de Vaux de Foletier, Hector Talvart, foreword by Thierry Sandre, La Rochelle, Éditions d'art Raymond Bergevin
- 1927: Le Limousin, le Quercy et le Périgord, in Le Visage de la France , Éditions des Horizons de France, fasc. 14.
- 1928: Le Nouveau Livre de la Pléiade, Librairie de France, F. Sant'Andrea, collection of poems by Joachim Gasquet, Comtesse de Noailles, Pierre Camo, Charles Derennes, Xavier de Magallon, Fernand Mazade, Paul Valéry
- 1928: La dompteuse, in La Femme, selon , Baudinière
- 1930: Gens et Bêtes de Gascogne, in Sud-Ouest. Béarn, Pays basque, Côte d'Argent, Gascogne, by Xavier de Cardaillac, Charles Derennes, François Duhourcau, Pierre Frondaie, Étienne Huyard, Francis Jammes, Hervé Lauwick, Maxime Leroy, François Mauriac, Joseph de Pesquidoux, J. H. Rosny Jeune, drawings by P.-G. Rigaud, Léon Fauret, Suzanne Labatut, Hossegor, Librairie D. Chabas