Photo de l'auteur

Francis Ambrière (1907–1998)

Auteur de Guide bleu. Grèce

73+ oeuvres 175 utilisateurs 1 Critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: gallica.bnf.fr

Œuvres de Francis Ambrière

Guide bleu. Grèce (1955) 21 exemplaires
Les grandes vacances (1946) 16 exemplaires
Guide bleu. Italie (1962) 15 exemplaires
Guide bleu. Moyen Orient (1964) 10 exemplaires
Guide bleu. Algérie, Tunisie (1930) 8 exemplaires
Les Guides Bleus - Espagne (1963) 6 exemplaires
Los premios Goncourt de novela. Volumen 4 (1969) — Contributeur — 5 exemplaires
Istanbul et ses environs (1966) 3 exemplaires
Belgique Luxembourg 3 exemplaires
Maroc 3 exemplaires
Hollande 2 exemplaires
Normandie 2 exemplaires
Autriche (1961) 2 exemplaires
L'Italie en un volume 2 exemplaires
Madagascar 1 exemplaire
Corse (guide bleu) 1 exemplaire
Les guides bleus mexique (1968) 1 exemplaire
Pologne 1 exemplaire
Rome et ses environs 1 exemplaire
Yougoslavie 1 exemplaire
Mexique 1 exemplaire
Bretagne 1 exemplaire
Roumanie 1 exemplaire
Israël 1 exemplaire
Savoie 1 exemplaire
Tunisie 1 exemplaire
Dauphiné 1 exemplaire
Die Blauen Führer : Italien (1963) 1 exemplaire
Suisse 1 exemplaire
Athens and Environs 1 exemplaire
Bulgarie 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

France automobile en un volume — Directeur de publication, quelques éditions7 exemplaires
Paris in a Week and a Day at Versailles (1959) — Contributeur — 4 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Ambrière, Francis
Nom légal
Letellier, Charles
Date de naissance
1907-09-27
Date de décès
1998-07-01
Sexe
male
Nationalité
France
Pays (pour la carte)
France
Lieu de naissance
Paris, France
Lieu du décès
Bonvilliers, Oise, France

Membres

Critiques

The Long Holiday won the Prix Goncourt in 1946. French author Francis Ambriere was taken captive in 1940, along with 1.7 million of his fellow countrymen, and held in Germany until 1945, one of the largest and longest military internments of the war. They were a veritable country within a country.

It's written for a French audience right after the war with a fair amount of nationalistic furor, but that doesn't take away from the freshness of the events having just occurred. Ambriere actually wrote much of it while still in prison and smuggled his papers out, it has an immediacy that goes beyond the kind of heroic romanticism that typify many accounts like this. It doesn't flinch from the brutality of the Germans, but doesn't dwell on it. It's episodic and not particularly dramatic, but reads well and is entertaining.

I was unable to find any sort of critical writings about the book, it seems to be almost entirely forgotten. That's too bad as it's not badly written and is an interesting account about an alternative way many people spent WWII. These were military camps for soldiers protected by the Geneva Convention, not civilians camps like the Holocaust, very different. The many ways in which the French fooled the Germans with small acts of disobedience is probably the best part of the book, movie material like in "The Great Escape", but without the hoohah bravado, more stylistic French. Like when housewives hung up laundry to dry, they had red/blue/white clothing, the colors of the French flag. Or when a prisoner escaped by seducing a German widow, he then donned her dead husbands Nazi identity (uniform and papers) and lived the high life in Berlin for the rest of the war!

--Review by Stephen Balbach, via CoolReading (c) 2011 cc-by-nd
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
Stbalbach | Jan 20, 2011 |

Prix et récompenses

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Statistiques

Œuvres
73
Aussi par
2
Membres
175
Popularité
#122,547
Évaluation
3.0
Critiques
1
ISBN
6
Langues
1

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