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Word: giono (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...Some Negro artists have done impressively well. Writer Chester Himes, 49, from Jefferson City, Mo., last week won the Grand Prix de Littérature Policière for his novel, La Reine des Pommes, a roman noir or dark-toned crime story that was hailed by Author Jean Giono as "the most extraordinary novel I have read in a long time," and praised by Jean Cocteau as "a prodigious masterpiece." Sculptor Harold Cousins, from Washington, D.C., has lived nine years in Paris, sold a sculpture last month to the Claude Bernard Gallery, and has been commissioned by Susse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Amid the Alien Corn | 11/17/1958 | See Source »

...most publicized French trial since those of Petain and Laval in 1945. Banks of reporters from Paris and London came down to tell the story for their readers. A U.S. movie producer dropped by to measure the film possibilities of Gaston's case. Famed French Author Jean Giono was on hand to get material for a book. By comparison with Gaston's trial, said one enthusiastic French crime reporter, "the theaters of Paris are dull...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: The Guilty Party | 12/6/1954 | See Source »

...HORSEMAN ON THE ROOF (426 pp.) -Jean Giono-Knopf...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Plague in Provence | 2/1/1954 | See Source »

...begins the latest problem novel by France's Jean Giono. For dust-jacket purposes, it may be described as the stirring adventures of a young Italian officer making his way home through the south of France during the terrible 1838 epi demic of Asiatic cholera. But at bottom, it is not a costume novel at all; it is a new appraisal of an ancient subject -human mortality. Death, and the behavior of people in the face of death, make its subject matter, but its main question is: How should man behave, ideally, when confronted by his oldest, most ruthless...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Plague in Provence | 2/1/1954 | See Source »

Much of this view of life and death is as old as the Stoics and as new as the Existentialists. Where Jean Giono differs from both Marcus Aurelius and Jean-Paul Sartre is in his addiction to verbal color and sensuous imagery. The Horseman on the Roof is an orgy of symbolic corpses, stinks, carrion crows and flesh-eating nightingales, interspersed with involved philosophical breedings and brisked up with epigrams ("Cavalrymen like women to scream"; "I'm afraid of grocers when they have guns"). But. like most contemporary philosophical novelists, Giono makes no real effort to be clear...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Plague in Provence | 2/1/1954 | See Source »

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