SIMON, CLAUDE (-EUGÈNE-HENRI)


Meaning of SIMON, CLAUDE (-EUGÈNE-HENRI) in English

born Oct. 10, 1913, Tananarive, Madag.

French writer.

Captured while fighting in World War II, he escaped to join the French Resistance. He completed his first novel during the war. His works, mixing narration and stream of consciousness in densely constructed prose, are representative of the nouveau roman ("new novel"), or French antinovel , that emerged in the 1950s. Perhaps most important is the cycle comprising The Grass (1958), The Flanders Road (1960), The Palace (1962), and Histoire (1967), with its recurring characters and events. His other novels include The Wind (1957), Triptych (1973), and The Acacia (1989). He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1985.

Britannica English dictionary.      Английский словарь Британика.