Background
Georges Duhamel was born in Paris, France on June 30, 1884. His father, a clerk in a herbalist shop, rose to the position of junior surgeon, becoming a doctor at age 51.
(The New Book of the Martyrs is a result of Georges Duhame...)
The New Book of the Martyrs is a result of Georges Duhamel's life changing experience as a doctor in World War I. His stories of Carre and Lerondeau, Verdun, The Death of Mercier and others are thought provoking and emotional. "Someone who had been visiting the wounded said to me: "The beds are really very white, the dressings are clean, all the patients seem to be playing cards, reading the papers, eating dainties; they are simple, often very gentle, they don't look very unhappy. They all tell the same story... The war has not changed them much. One can recognize them all." "Are you sure that you recognize them? You have just been looking at them, are you sure that you have seen them? "Under their bandages are wounds you cannot imagine. Below the wounds, in the depths of the mutilated flesh, a soul, strange and furtive, is stirring in feverish exaltation, a soul which does not readily reveal itself, which expresses itself artlessly, but which I would fain make you understand." Georges Duhamel was a French author. Between 1906 and 1909 he founded l'Abbaye de Créteil with Charles Vildrac. The group brought together poets, writers, musicians and painters. From 1912, he became an editor of the literary review Mercure de France. He trained as a doctor, and during World War I worked as an army surgeon for four years. In 1935, he was elected to the 30th chair at the Académie Française. During World War II Duhamel's work was banned by the Germans. After the war, Duhamel was named president of the Alliance Française and returned to his public speaking.
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Georges Duhamel was born in Paris, France on June 30, 1884. His father, a clerk in a herbalist shop, rose to the position of junior surgeon, becoming a doctor at age 51.
After completing lycée, Duhamel entered the same medical school at the University of Paris that his father had attended.
Georges continued writing, however, and in 1906 he joined with Jules Romains, Charles Vildrac, and others to form the group of l'Abbaye, the cradle of unanimism. He became a doctor in 1909 and served in that capacity in World War I. Duhamel's collections of short stories, Vies des Martyrs: 1914-1916 (1917; The New Book of Martyrs, 1918), and Civilisation 1914-1917 (1918; Civilization, 1919), which was awarded the Goncourt Prize, reveal the author's pity for the wounded and sick soldiers whom he attended. This same compassion for the suffering of humanity, particularly the humble and the poor, inspired Les Hommes abandonnées (1921; "Abandoned Men") and the five novels which form the cycle of Salavin (1920 - 1932; Slavin, 1936). The Chronique des Pasquier (1933 - 1944) is a cyclical novel in ten volumes devoted to the Pasquier family (portions translated into English, 1937-1946). A great traveler, Duhamel wrote Voyage à Moscou (1927), with some sympathy for Communism, and Scènes de la vie future (1930; America, the Menace, 1931). In 1944 he began a series of autobiographical novels entitled Lumières sur vie ("Lights on My Life").
(The New Book of the Martyrs is a result of Georges Duhame...)
Académie française
Georges married to Blanche Albane.