Émile-Paul Frères Explained

Émile-Paul Frères
Founded:1881[1]
Founder:Albert and Robert Paul
Status:Defunct (1982)
Headquarters:Paris, France
Country:France
Publications:Books

Émile-Paul Frères was a French publishing house, whose origins date back to 1881. 'Frères' is French for 'Brothers'. The brand was created by two brothers, Albert and Robert Paul, the sons of the founder Émile Paul.[2] It was active until 1955, before disappearing in 1982. It was the first publisher of Alain-Fournier's Le Grand Meaulnes.[3]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Rivière . Jacques . Fournier . Alain . de Gaulmyn . Pierre . Rivière . Alain . Correspondance, 1904-1914: Juin 1907-juillet 1914 . 1991 . Gallimard . 596 . 14 January 2022.
  2. Book: Jacob . Max . Kimball . Anne . Correspondance 1915-1941 . 2006 . Méditerranée . 9782842722449 . 81 . 14 January 2022.
  3. Book: Gildea . Robert . Fighters in the Shadows - A New History of the French Resistance . 2015 . Harvard University Press . 9780674286108 . 155 . 14 January 2022.