Jeanne Cappe (29 August 1895 - 23 November 1956) was a Belgian journalist and author who wrote books for young people.[1]
The daughter of agnostic parents, she was born in Liège. Her father, a lawyer, was accused of embezzlement and fled to Greece; her mother Jeanne Fouassin disappeared and she was raised by her mother's parents. After completing her studies at a Catholic secondary school, she converted to Catholicism. She continued her studies at the Université de Louvain.[2]
Cappe began work as a journalist, as an editor for Le Vingtième Siècle from 1924 to 1928 and for La Nation belge from 1928 to 1955. From July 1927 to January 1928, she was editor-in-chief for La femme belge. Around the same time, she married Fernand Desonay, a Belgian academic. Cappe helped found Scriptores catholici in 1934.[1]
She wrote several lives of the saints for young readers, such as Astrid, la reine au sourire, published in 1935, which was translated into Swedish and English.[1] Cappe published adapted versions of works by Hans Christian Andersen, Lewis Carroll, the brothers Grimm and Charles Perrault.[2] She also published non-fiction works about children's literature and on child psychology.
She helped found the Conseil de littérature de jeunesse in 1949 and served as its president.[1] The Conseil published the magazine Littérature de jeunesse, which was published until 1976; Cappe directed its publication until her death[3] in Brussels at the age of 61.[1]