Pierre Gamarra (French pronunciation:[pjɛʁ gamaˈʁa]; 10 July 1919 – 20 May 2009) was a French poet, novelist and literary critic, a long-time chief editor and director of the literary magazine Europe. Gamarra is best known for his poems and novels for the youth and for narrative and poetical works deeply rooted in his native region of Midi-Pyrénées.
Pierre Gamarra
Gamarra in Toulouse, 1945
Born
Pierre Albert Gamarra (1919-07-10)10 July 1919 Toulouse, France
Died
20 May 2009(2009-05-20) (aged89) Argenteuil, France
Pierre Gamarra was born in Toulouse on 10 July 1919. From 1938 until 1940, he was a teacher in the South of France. During the German Occupation, he joined various Resistance groups in Toulouse, involved in the writing and distributing of clandestine publications. This led him to a career as a journalist, and then, more specifically both as a writer and a literary journalist.[1]
In 1948, Pierre Gamarra received the first Charles-Veillon International Grand Prize[fr] in Lausanne for his first novel, La Maison de feu.[n 1] Members of the 1948 Veillon Prize jury included writers André Chamson, Vercors, Franz Hellens and Louis Guilloux.[n 2] The novel is described in Books Abroad as "a beautifully written tale of humble life, which Philippe and Jammes would have liked".[3]
From 1945 to 1951, he worked as a journalist in Toulouse. In 1951, Louis Aragon, Jean Cassou and André Chamson offered him a position in Paris as editor-in-chief of the literary magazine Europe.[4] He occupied this position until 1974, when he became director of the magazine. Under Pierre Gamarra's direction, Europe continued the project initiated in 1923 by Romain Rolland and other writers.[n 3] Until 2009, Pierre Gamarra also contributed to most of the magazines's issues with a book review column titled "La Machine à écrire" (The Typewriter).[n 4][5]
Most of his novels take place in his native South-West of France: he wrote a novel trilogy based on the history of Toulouse and various novels set in that town, along the Garonne[6] or in the Pyrenees. John L. Brown, in World Literature Today, writes that Pierre Gamarra's descriptions of Toulouse, its people and its region were "masterly", "skillfully and poetically" composed "with a vibrant lyricism"[7] and that:
Few contemporary French novelists can communicate a feeling for place, melding poetry and realism, myth and history, more movingly and convincingly than Pierre Gamarra.[8]
Pierre Gamarra is also the author of The Midnight Roosters,[n 5] a novel set in Aveyron during the French Revolution.[9] The book was adapted for the French television channel FR3 in 1973. The film, casting Claude Brosset[fr], was shot in the town of Najac.[10]
In 1955, he published one of his best known novels, Le Maître d’école;[n 6] the book and its sequel La Femme de Simon[n 7] (1962) received critical praise.[11] Reviewing his 1957 short stories collectionLes Amours du potier,[n 8] Lois Marie Sutton deems that, although war affects the plots of many of "all (those) delightful thirteen stories", "it is the light-hearted plot that Gamarra maneuvers best" and that "as in his previous publications, (the author) shows himself to be a master delineator of the life of the average peasant and employee."[12]
In 1961, Pierre Gamarra received the Prix Jeunesse[fr] for L'Aventure du Serpent à Plumes[n 9] and in 1985, the SGDL Grand Prize[n 10] for his novel Le Fleuve Palimpseste.[n 11]
Pierre Gamarra died in Argenteuil on 20 May 2009, leaving a substantial body of work, not yet translated into English for the most part. The Encyclopædia Britannica sees in him a "delightful practitioner with notable drollery and high technical skills"[13] in the art of children's poetry and children's stories. His poems[n 12] and fables[n 13][17] are well known by French schoolchildren.[18][19][20]
Selection of works
In French unless otherwise stated
Literature for the youth
Stories
Les Vacances de tonton 36 (2006)
Moustache et ses amis de toutes les couleurs (2005)
ISBN2-7479-0084-3
New edition of Moustache et ses amis (1974)
Douze tonnes de diamant (1978) ISBN2-7047-0302-7
L'Aventure du Serpent à plumes, Prize for the Youth 1961
Berlurette trilogy:
Berlurette contre Tour Eiffel (1961)
Le Trésor de Tricoire (1959)
Le Mystère de la Berlurette (1957)
La Rose des Karpathes, (1955)
In English
The Bridge on the River Clarinette in Cricket: the magazine for children, vol. 2 No. 11, (La Salle, Illinois) 1975, (p.22-29) – illustrated by Marilyn Hafner, translated by Paulette Henderson
Meet your author (op. cit. pp.30–33), tr. Paulette Henderson
Fables collections
Salut, Monsieur de La Fontaine (2005), ill. Frédéric Devienne, ISBN2-916237-00-3
La Mandarine et le Mandarin (1970)
Poetry
Mon cartable et autres poèmes à réciter (2006) ISBN2747901122
Des mots pour une maman (1984) ISBN2-7082-2379-8
Voici des maisons (1979) ISBN2-7047-0117-2
Les Mots enchantés (1952)
In English
'My schoolbag', in Berthe Mouchette Celebration, Melbourne Alliance française (2019), p. 74-75
CD
Les Aventuriers de l'alphabet (2002) ISBN2-7404-1278-9
Adaptations
Les Fariboles de Bolla (1981), La Farandole[fr], original Swedish text and ill. by Gunilla Bergström, ISBN2-7047-0232-2
Novels
L'Empreinte de l'ours (2010), De Borée (Sayat) ISBN9782844949899
Les Coqs de minuit (new ed. including Rosalie Brousse) 2009, De Borée ISBN9782844949097
Le Maître d'école (new ed. including La Femme de Simon) 2008, De Borée ISBN9782812903007
Les Lèvres de l’été (1986) ISBN2-209-05808-2
Le Fleuve palimpseste PUF (1985) ISBN9782130385868; SGDL Prize for the novel
Les Cahiers de la Lomagne (Los Quasèrns de la Lomanha), No. 15 (Year 2009), pp.1&16-29
Two streets (one in Argenteuil, one in Montauban) and a cul-de-sac in Boulazac—, two schools (one in Montauban, the other in Bessens[22])— and two public libraries (one in Argenteuil,[23] the other in Andrest) are named after Pierre Gamarra.
Notes
La Maison de feu means ″The fiery house″. The novel takes place in Toulouse during the 1930s.
For instance, many issues were devoted to an extensive presentation of countries whose literature is not internationally very well known.
In French La Machine à écrire; since 2009, the column is continued in Europe by Jacques Lèbre.
In French Les Coqs de Minuit.
French for The Schoolmaster.
French for Simon’s wife, Simon being Simon Sermet, the main character in both novels.
French for A Potter's lovers.
L’Aventure du Serpent à Plumes, French for ″The Adventure of the Feathered Snake″, is a novel for the youth.
In French, Grand Prix de la Société des gens de lettres pour le roman.
Le Fleuve palimpseste, French for ″The Palimpsest river″. The river is the Garonne.
Pierre Gamarra’s best known poems include Mon cartable (My schoolbag),[14]My School[15] and The Clock.
His best known fables include The Cosmonaut and his host, The Apple, The Ski, The mocked Mocker (Le Moqueur moqué) or The Fly and the Cream.[16]
French for The Woman and the River. The river is, again, the Garonne.[21]
L'assassin a le prix Goncourt (French for 'The Murderer receives the Goncourt Prize’) is set in Moissac.
See also
Children's literature portal
Europe (magazine)
References
″This is how a countryside schoolteacher who had been studying at the 'École normale primaire', became, through the turmoil of the Phoney War and the Resistance, a poet, a novelist, a journalist living in the region of Paris, member of the editorial board at the magazine Europe for some fifty years.″
(...) c’est ainsi que l’instituteur rural préparé par ses années d’École normale primaire s’est mué, les bouleversements de la drôle de guerre et la Résistance aidant, en un poète, romancier, journaliste vivant en région parisienne, membre pendant quelque cinquante ans du comité de rédaction de la revue Europe (...)
Claude Sicard, ″Pierre Gamarra″ in Balade en Midi-Pyrénées, sur les pas des écrivains, Alexandrines, 2011 (Excerpt on the Publisher website (in French)).
Simone Hauert Annabelle, Year 8, number 85, March 1948 (Lausanne), p.45. See also Le Confédéré (Martigny) number 59, 19 May 1948 p. 2. (Read online).
Georgette R. Schuler (Spring 1949). "Review of La Maison de feu". Books Abroad. 23 (2): 156. doi:10.2307/40086832. JSTOR40086832.
″Pierre Gamarra kept for all his life his passion for the regions along the Garonne river: it was present in his poems, novels and stories.″
(Pierre Gamarra conservera toute sa vie une passion pour ces terres de Garonne qui reviendront dans ses poèmes, ses romans, ses récits.)
Alain Nicolas, ″Pierre Gamarra est mort″, L’Humanité, 25 May 2009. (online version(in French))
John L. Brown, Review of Le Fleuve palimpseste, World Literature Today, Vol. 59, No. 1, Winter, 1985 ISSN0196-3570.
John L. Brown (1987). "Review of Les Lèvres de l'été". World Literature Today. 61 (2): 236. doi:10.2307/40143008. JSTOR40143008.
Les Coqs de minuit (1950, reed. 2009) De Borée ISBN9782844949097
″The manner of telling is so matter of fact that the tragedy takes one unaware.″, according to Helen M. Ranson, reviewing Le Maître d’école, in Books Abroad, Vol. 31, No. 1, Winter, 1957, ISSN0006-7431
Sutton Lois Marie (1958). "Review of Les Amours du potier". Books Abroad. 32 (4): 394. doi:10.2307/40098002. JSTOR40098002.
Article Children’s literature (20th century) in Encyclopædia Britannica:
Children’s verse has at least one delightful practitioner in Pierre Gamarra. His Mandarine et le Mandarin contains Fontainesque fables of notable drollery and high technical skill.
Most of Pierre Gamarra’s fables are collected in La Mandarine et le Mandarin (1970) and in Salut, Monsieur de La Fontaine (2005), (rewiewed on Le Printemps des poètes’ website(in French)).
″His abundant body of work has earned him a prominent place in Children’s literature; his poems are read in schools, taught and learned by heart.″ (Sa frénésie d'écrire lui confère une place de choix dans la littérature enfantine; on lit ses poèmes dans les écoles, on les enseigne, on les apprend.)
Guillaume de Toulouse-Lautrec, foreword to Mon pays l'Occitanie, 2009, p. 12.
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