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Émile Baumann

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Died
  
24 November 1941, Vernègues, France

Émile Baumann (24 November 1868 – 24 November 1941) was a French writer.

Biography

Baumann was born in Lyons in 1868. He was descended from a Lutheran family converted to Catholicism. In Algiers he met Saint-Saëns, and devoted his first work to him. He was directly involved in the Catholic Literary Renaissance movement, alongside such people as François Mauriac, Paul Claudel and Pierre Reverdy. Sister Mary Keeler, in her Catholic Literary France says that of all French novelists of the time Baumann was perhaps the most completely Catholic. He was awarded the Prix Balzac in 1922 for his novel Job le Prédestiné. In 1931 he married Elisabeth de Groux, daughter of Belgian painter Henry de Groux.

He died in Vernègues.

References

Émile Baumann Wikipedia


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