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  1. 1 de may. de 2015 · Monsieur Vénus. : Rachilde. Modern Language Association, May 1, 2015 - Fiction - 211 pages. When the rich and well-connected Raoule de Vénérande becomes enamored of Jacques Silvert, a poor young man who makes artificial flowers for a living, she turns him into her mistress and eventually into her wife. Raoule's suitor, a cigar-smoking former ...

  2. by. Rachilde, Melanie C. Hawthorne (Translator) 3.80 avg rating — 746 ratings — published 1884 — 61 editions. Want to Read. saving…. Want to Read. Currently Reading. Read.

  3. 165 ratings17 reviews. The Juggler (La Jongleuse) is a "decadent" novel that was first published in 1900. Its author, Marguerite Vallette-Eymery (1860-1953), who used the pseudonym Rachilde, was a prolific novelist (over sixty works of fiction), playwright, literary critic and reviewer, and a forceful presence in French literary society of her ...

  4. Rachilde is the pseudonym of Marguerite Eymery Vallette (1860-1953), one of the few women active in Paris theater in the 1890's. She was a writer with a powerful personality, who made her place at the very center of the Symbolist movement in France, but she is relatively unknown in this country. She wrote over twenty plays that were produced throughout much of Europe.

  5. Written, produced and animated by Rachilde for Cawthron Institute, Lakes380 and the Science Learning Hub. Get in Touch. Can I help you with your current sci-comm projects, complete a one-off commission piece or help flesh out your creative concepts?

  6. 30 de ago. de 2015 · Marguerite Vallete-Eymery (1860-1953), más conocida por su seudónimo Rachilde, fue una escritora francesa, a caballo entre dos siglos, que escandalizó a la sociedad de su época, tanto por sus obras literarias como por su forma de vida. FUENTE: Wikimedia. Con 20 años, abandonó Aquitania para ir a vivir a París, con la intención de probar ...

  7. 1 de may. de 2015 · About the author (2015) A writer and cultural arbiter of a salon in France from the early 1880s until 1930, Rachilde (Marguerite Eymery) won celebrity with Monsieur Vénus. An inversion of the Pygmalion story, the novel was judged to be pornographic, and a Belgian court sentenced its author (in absentia) to two years in prison.