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Victor Margueritte
Victor Margueritte (1 December 1866 – 23 March 1942) was a French novelist. He was the younger brother of Paul Margueritte (1860–1918).
Life
He and his brother were born in Algeria. They were the sons of General Jean Auguste Margueritte (1823–1870), who after a career in Algeria was mortally wounded in the great cavalry charge at Sedan and died in Belgium on 6 September 1870. An account of their father's life was published by Paul as Mon père (1884; enlarged ed., 1897). The names of the two brothers are generally associated, on account of their collaboration. Victor entered his father's regiment, the Chasseurs d'Afrique, in 1888, and served in the army until 1896, when he resigned his commission. He was already known by some volumes of poetry, and by a translation from Calderon (La Double méprise, played at the Odéon, 1898) when he began to collaborate with his brother. Together they worked on several novels and historical works. Victor Margueritte wrote several theatrical "charades" and collaborated with Paul on at least one pantomime: La Peur. His novel La Garçonne (1922), which depicted a sexually liberated young woman who wanted to "live like a man," was considered so shocking it caused the author to lose his Légion d'honneur. During World War II he glorified the Nazi Germany and vilified his compatriots, who chose to fight on the side of the Allies (L'Oeuvre No 9.248 14 February 1941).
Works
Novels
Essays
Various
With Paul Margueritte
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