Frédéric Soulié
Frédéric Soulié (23 December 1800 – 23 September 1847) was a French popular novelist and playwright.[1] He wrote over forty sensation novels like Mémoires du diable (1837-8).
Life[]
Frédéric Soulié was born in Foix, the son of a philosopher professor. He gained a law degree before going to Paris to pursue a literary life. Though his early historical dramas were unsuccessful, he gained more attention with the novel Les deux cadavres (1832).[2]
Works[]
Plays[]
- Roméo et Juliette, 1828.
- Christine à Fontainebleau, 1829.
- Clotilde, 1832.
- Diane de Chivri, 1839
- Le fils de la folle
- Le Proscrit, 1840
- La Closerie des Genêts, 1846.
Novels[]
- Les deux cadavres [The two corpses], 1832.
- Le vicomte de Béziers, 1834.
- Le comte de Toulouse, 1835.
- Les mémoires du diable [Memoirs of the devil], 1837-8.
- Les prétendus [The pretenders], 1842.
- La lionne [The lion], 1846
- La comtesse de Monrion, 1847
- Confession générale
- Eulalie Pons
- La Comtesse de Mourion
- Saturnin Fichet
References[]
- ^ The Cambridge Paperback Guide to Theatre, p. 347 (1996)
- ^ France Canh-Gruyer, Frédéric Soulié, Encyclopaedia Universalis. Accessed 13 January 2013.
External links[]
Categories:
- 1800 births
- 1847 deaths
- People from Foix
- 19th-century French dramatists and playwrights
- Burials at Père Lachaise Cemetery
- 19th-century French novelists
- French male novelists
- 19th-century French male writers