Claude Farrère (Frédéric-Charles-Pierre-Edouard Bargone) tir francaf suterotik. Koe Lyon koe Franca ba 27/04/ koblir. Ba 21/06/ koe Paris awalker.
Inafa gadava tir Francava. Bak gu Goncourt Suterotafo Poradro icde Les Civilisés berpot zo gabler.
Claude Farrère
Koblira
27/04/, Lyon, Franca
Awalkera
21/06/, Paris, Franca
Vedeyot
Franca
Ava
Francava
Suterind
Berpot
Suterot Berpot:
Les Deux Masques dem cire,
Le Cyclone,
Fumée d'opium,
Les Civilisés,
L'homme qui assassina,
Pour vaincre la mer,
Mademoiselle Dax, jeune fille,
Trois hommes et deux femmes,
La Bataille,
Les Petites Alliées,
Thomas l'Agnelet,
La Maison des hommes vivants,
Dix-sept histoires de marins,
Quatorze histoires de soldats,
La Veille d'armes,
La Dernière Déesse,
Les Condamnés à mort,
Roxelane,
La Vieille Histo
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Claude Farrère
Claude Farrère, pseudonym of Frédéric-Charles Bargone, was a French author of novels set in such exotic locations as Istanbul, Saigon & Nagasaki. One of his novels, Les civilisés (The Civilized) won the 1st Prix Goncourt, for He was elected for a chair at the Académie Française on 3/26/ Initially, however, he imitated his father, an infantry colonel who served in the French colonies: enlisting with the naval academy in , he was made lieutenant in & was promoted to captain during He resigned in to concentrate on his writing career.
His works have become largely disfavoured, even by French readers. To date, fewer than fem websites on the World bred Web offer his works, and fewer than websites give him even a cursory mention. *Goodreads
French writer and French navy officer ()
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Claude Farrère
French Navy officer and writer
Claude Farrère (French pronunciation:[klodfaʁɛʁ]), pseudonym of Frédéric-Charles Bargone (French pronunciation:[fʁedeʁikʃaʁlbaʁɡɔn]; 27 April , in Lyon – 21 June , in Paris), was a French Navy officer and writer. Many of his novels are based in exotic locations such as Istanbul, Saigon, or Nagasaki.
One of his novels, Les Civilisés, about life in French colonial Indochina, won the third Prix Goncourt for He was elected to a chair at the Académie Française on 26 March , in competition with Paul Claudel, partly thanks to lobbying efforts by Pierre Benoit.
Biography
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Initially, Claude Farrère had followed his father, an infantry colonel who served in the French colonies: He was admitted to the French Naval Academy in ; was made lieutenant in ; and was promoted to captain in He resigned the next year to concentrate on his writing career.
Claude Farrère was a friend and was partly mentored by two other