Renée Massip Explained

Renée Massip, (31 Mars 1907[1] - 21 March 2002) was a French writer[2] and journalist. She was the winner of the 1963 Prix Interallié[3] [4] and member of the jury of the Prix Femina.

Early life and education

Massip (née Renée Castaing) was born in south-western France, in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department. Her parents were school principals. Her home town was Arette. She attended the École Normale in Pau, studying history and literature.

Career

Massip married the French journalist Roger Massip, and from 1931 to 1937, followed her husband who was then a French newspaper correspondent in Romania and Poland. In 1939, she became a journalist, and joined the desk of Havas, a French news and advertising agency. She lived in Lyon during World War II.

Massip worked for the French newspapers France-Soir and the literary section of Le Figaro. She was a permanent member of the French literary prize Prix Femina committee from 1972 to 1996.

Massip has written a dozen books, including Douce Lumiere, La Regente,[5] and La Vie Absente. In 1963 she published La Bête quaternaire, for which she received the Prix Interallié, and Le Rire de Sara for which she won the Grand Prize of the Catholic Novel in 1966.

Books

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Margery Resnick. Isabelle De Courtivron. Women writers in translation: an annotated bibliography, 1945-1982. registration. 1 January 1984. Garland Pub.. 978-0-8240-9332-7. 57.
  2. David J. Bond, "Renée Massip: Religion and The Text". Dalhousie French Studies, Vol. 51 (Summer 2000), pp. 174-183, Published by: Dalhousie University
  3. Book: Books and Bookmen. 1963. Hansom Books. 49.
  4. Book: Ernst Erich Noth. Books Abroad. 1964. University of Oklahoma Press. 120.
  5. Book: Walter Yust. Britannica book of the year. 1955. Encyclopædia Britannica, inc.. 344.
  6. Book: James Frederick Mason. Hélène Josephine Harvitt. The French Review. 1980. American Association of Teachers of French. 366.