• Thumbnail for Émile Danoën
    Émile Danoën (10 January 1920 – 7 May 1999) was a French journalist and novelist. Danoën was born Émile Orvoën, to Pierre Orvoën and Léonie Le Doze at...
    5 KB (616 words) - 23:02, 13 August 2022
  • Thumbnail for Le Havre
    plot of Une maison soufflée aux vents (A house blown to the winds) by Émile Danoën, winner of the Popular Novel Prize in 1951, and its sequel Idylle dans...
    139 KB (15,602 words) - 12:53, 11 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Louis Aragon
    then alone after Bloch's death in 1947. The newspaper, which counted Emile Danoën among its collaborators, closed in March 1953. In 1939, he married Russian-born...
    23 KB (2,604 words) - 05:52, 23 May 2024
  • Mifflin), Ruth Park's The Witch's Thorn (#5, also with Houghton Mifflin), Emile Danoen's Tides of Tide (#6), Frank Bonham's Blood on the Land (#7), Al Capp's...
    16 KB (1,730 words) - 03:30, 16 April 2024
  • poet Jeanne Coroller-Danio Reun ar C'halan, also known as René Galand Emile Danoën François Debeauvais Jean-Marie Déguignet Pêr Denez, Breton language novelist...
    2 KB (200 words) - 16:33, 21 January 2023
  • Thumbnail for Théodore Botrel
    the elder of whom, named Léna after his first wife, married the writer Emile Danoën. The younger, Janick, was the mother of singer Renaud Detressan. Botrel...
    12 KB (1,575 words) - 02:01, 1 June 2024
  • authors as diverse as Aragon, Jean-Richard Bloch, Louis-Ferdinand Céline, Emile Danoën, Jean Giono, Panaït Istrati, Rabindranath Tagore or Tristan Tzara, for...
    5 KB (496 words) - 08:37, 6 May 2024
  • In the late 1930s, he befriended a group of writers, which included Emile Danoën and his former pupil Pierre Aubery. In 1937 he published his first book...
    2 KB (267 words) - 13:03, 14 April 2022