Eugene Muller ( fr. Eugène Muller ; July 31, 1826 [2] , Verneson - 1913 , Paris ) - French writer.
| Eugene Muller | |
|---|---|
| fr. Eugène muller | |
| Aliases | Uncle Anselme ( French Oncle Anselme ) |
| Date of Birth | July 31, 1826 |
| Place of Birth | Verneson , France |
| Date of death | 1913 |
| A place of death | Paris , France |
| Citizenship | France |
| Occupation | prose writer , essayist |
| Language of Works | |
Biography
Since 1868 he worked in the Paris Library of the Arsenal , in 1884 - 1905 her keeper.
The author of a number of novels, short stories (including for children); in periodicals was also published under the pseudonym Uncle Anselm ( FR. Oncle Anselme ). Müller’s first success was due to his debut, the pastoral short of Mionnette ( Fr. Mionnette ; 1858 ), released with the subtitle “In the manner of George Sand ”. This book was followed by other sentimental tales of girls and girls - Dryetta (1866) and Robinsonette ( French Robinsonette: Histoire d'une petite orpheline ; 1876 ), and many other works.
In the non-fiction genre, Müller's books such as “The Youth of Famous People” ( Fr. La jeunesse des hommes célèbres ; 1867 , German translation 1901, Ukrainian translation 1924), and “The Forest” ( Fr. La Forêt ; 1878 , p. illustrations by Theodore Rousseau and other Barbizon artists) - a somewhat pompous story about the world's forests, as well as a “Little treatise on French politeness” ( French Petit traité de la politesse française ; 1861 ), which was repeatedly reprinted until 1925 . He wrote biographies of famous personalities, retold for children biographies of Beethoven, Haydn, Galileo, Horace, Lope de Vega, Moliere, Mozart, Paganini, Columbus, Napoleon, Rubens, Falcone .
Translated into French the book of the son of Christopher Columbus Fernando about his father.
Notes
- ↑ BNF ID : 2011 Open Data Platform .
- ↑ Some sources mistakenly 1823.