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Suzanne Renaud

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Nationality
  
French

Occupation
  
Poet


Name
  
Suzanne Renaud

Role
  
Poet

Suzanne Renaud iidnescz14023cl6OB518900renaudJPG

Born
  
Died
  
1964, Havlickuv Brod, Czech Republic

Children
  
Daniel Reynek, Jiri Reynek

Suzanne Renaud (born 1889 in Lyon, France; died 1964, in Havlíčkův Brod) was a French poet and translator.

Contents

Suzanne Renaud Zstala vrn ivotnmu ano Katolick tdenk

Life

Suzanne Renaud Suzanne Renaudov esk televize

Renaud moved from her native Lyon to Grenoble in 1894, and during the war she worked at the military infirmary there. In 1926 she married the Czech poet Bohuslav Reynek in Grenoble, who had come to seek her permission to translate her poetry in 1923. For the next ten years they divided their time between France and Czechoslovakia, settling in the latter country definitively in 1936. She translated her husband's works into French, as he did for her. In the years 1947–1959 she corresponded with the French writer Henri Pourrat. She also translated the Czech poets Vladimír Holan and František Halas into French.

Suzanne Renaud Suzanne Renaudov esk televize

They had two sons: Daniel Reynek (1928–2014), a photographer, and Jiří Reynek (1929–2014), a graphic artist, poet and translator.

Works

Suzanne Renaud Radio Prague La seconde patrie de Suzanne Renaud

  • Ta vie est là (Saint-Félicien-en-Vivarais: éditions du Pigeonnier, 1922)
  • Ailes de cendre (Pardubice: Vokolek, 1932), with illustrations by Bohuslav Reynek
  • Křídla z popele (Pardubice: Vokolek, 1935), translation of Ailes de cendre by Reynek
  • Victimae laudes (Pardubice: Vokolek, 1938), poetry collection
  • Dveře v přítmí (Kroměříž: Magnificat, 1946), translation by Reynek
  • Chvála oběti poems translated into Czech by Bohuslav Reynek (Brno: Atlantis, 1948)
  • Romarin ou Annette et Jean - Ballades et poésies populaires tchèques et moraves Renaud's translation of Czech and Moravian ballads and poetry
  • References

    Suzanne Renaud Wikipedia


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