Robert Sabatier
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Robert Sabatier (17 August 1923 – 28 June 2012) was a French poet and writer. He wrote numerous novels, essays and books of aphorisms and poems. He was elected to the
Académie Goncourt The Société littéraire des Goncourt (Goncourt Literary Society), usually called the Académie Goncourt (Goncourt Academy), is a French literary organisation based in Paris. It was founded in 1900 by the French writer and publisher Edmond de Go ...
in 1971, as well as to the Académie Mallarme. He is also the author of ''Histoire de la poésie française: La poésie du XVIIe siècle'' Among his notable works is the autobiographical series of novels "Roman d'Olivier" about growing up in the streets of a poor quarter in Paris during the 1930s. A title from the series, ''Les Allumettes Suédoises'' ('' The Safety Matches'', also translated under the title ''The Match Boy''), was adapted for French TV by Jacques Ertaud. According to Kirkus Reviews, the book ''Les Allumettes Suédoises'' sold 200,000 copies. Other autobiographical installments include "Olivier 1940" and "Les Trompettes Guerrières". More recent works include ''Diogène'' about the Cynic philosopher of ancient Greece. As a poet, Sabatier was awarded Le Prix Guillaume Apollinaire in 1955. A small selection of Sabatier's poems have been published in English translations by the American poet X.J. Kennedy and others in the anthology ''Modern European Poetry'' (edited by
Willis Barnstone Willis Barnstone (born November 13, 1927) is an American poet, religious scholar, and translator. He was born in Lewiston, Maine and lives in Oakland, California. He has translated works by Jorge Luis Borges, Antonio Machado, Rainer Maria Rilke, ...
et al., published by Bantam Books, NY, 1966). Kennedy's translations of Sabatier include the poems "Vegetal Body" and the elegiac "Mortal Landscape" where Sabatier wonders
The bird is flown, the monster not yet born
where shall we go in this demolished world?".
In an introduction to Sabatier, Barnstone states: "The poet's despair has sharp edges . . . but the bitter violence that strikes at the reader of these poems has its roots in an earlier joy that persists like a dream." Sabatier's poetry is deeply colored by memory and division: "He held the image that he loved so tight/his body itself cast two shadows."Robert Sabatier, from "Festival of the Moon," translated by Patricia Terry, included in ''Modern European Poetry'', edited by Willis Barnstone, et al., Bantam Books, New York, 1966, page 83 Before his death, Sabatier was writing his memoirs.


Novels

* ''Alain et le nègre'' (Éditions Albin Michel, 1953) * ''Le marchand de sable'' (1954) * ''Le goût de la cendre'' * ''Boulevard'' * ''Canard au sang'' * ''La sainte farce'' * ''La mort du figuier'' (
Prix Richelieu The Prix Richelieu is a French literary award that rewards a journalist who "testified by the quality of his own language, his concern to defend the French language". It is awarded annually, under the sponsorship of the association and the Éditio ...
1963) * ''Dessin sur un trottoir'' * ''Le chinois d'Afrique'' * ''Les années secrètes de la vie d'un homme'' (1984) * ''Les enfants de l'été'' (1978) * ''La Souris verte'' (1990) * ''Le Cygne noir'' (1995) * ''Le Lit de la Merveille'' (1997) * ''Le Sourire aux lèvres'' (2000) * ''Le Cordonnier de la rue triste'' (2009) * * Le roman d'Olivier: ** ''Les Allumettes suédoises'', Éditions Albin Michel, Paris (1969) ** ''Trois sucettes à la menthe'', Éditions Albin Michel, Paris (1972) ** ''Les Noisettes sauvages'' (1974) ** ''Les Fillettes chantantes'' (1980) ** ''David et Olivier'' (1986) ** ''Olivier et ses amis'' (1993) ** ''Olivier 1940'' (2003) ** ''Les Trompettes guerrières'' (2007)


References


External links

*
Traductions de ses poems en Hindi
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sabatier, Robert Writers from Paris 1923 births 2012 deaths French male poets 20th-century French poets 20th-century French novelists 21st-century French novelists Grand Cross of the Ordre national du Mérite 20th-century French male writers 21st-century French male writers Prix Guillaume Apollinaire winners