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Home  »  library  »  BIOS  »  Émile Zola (1840–1902)

C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

Émile Zola (1840–1902)

Zola, Émile (zō’lä). A celebrated French novelist; born in Paris, April 2, 1840; died in Paris, Sept. 29, 1902. He wrote: ‘Tales to Ninon’ (1864); ‘Claude’s Confession’ (1865); ‘A Dead Woman’s Vow’ (1866); ‘My Hatreds’ (1866); ‘My Salon’ (1866); ‘The Mysteries of Marseilles’ (1867); ‘Édouard Manet’ (1867); ‘Thérèse Raquin’ (1867); ‘Madeleine Férat’ (1868); ‘The Fortune of the Rougons’ (1871); ‘La Curée’ (1872); ‘The Maw [Ventre] of Paris’ (1873); ‘The Conquest of Plassans’ (1874); ‘New Tales to Ninon’ (1874); ‘The Sin of Abbé Mouret’ (1875); ‘His Excellency Eugène Rougon’ (1876); ‘L’Assommoir’ (1877); ‘A Page of Love’ (1878); ‘The French Republic and Literature’ (1879); ‘Nana’ (1880); ‘The Experimental Novel’ (1880); ‘Literary Documents, Studies and Portraits’ (1881); ‘Naturalism on the Stage’ (1881); ‘Our Dramatic Authors’ (1881); ‘The Realistic Novelists’ (1881); ‘A Campaign’ (1881); ‘Pot Bouille’ (1882); ‘Good Luck to the Ladies’ (1883); ‘The Joy of Living’ (1884); ‘Germinal’ (1885); ‘Work’ (‘L’Œuvre’ 1886); ‘Earth’ (‘La Terre’: 1887); ‘The Dream’ (‘Le Rêve’: 1888); ‘The Human Brute’ (‘La Bête Humaine’: 1890); ‘Money’ (1891); ‘The Downfall’ (‘La Débâcle’: 1892); ‘Doctor Pascal’ (1893); ‘Lourdes’ (1894); ‘Rome’ (1895). (See Critical and Biographical Introduction).