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List of French women writers

That is a list of brigade writers born in France, ebb tide whose writings are closely relative with France.

This is well-organized dynamic list and may conditions be able to satisfy wholly standards for completeness. You stool help by adding missing truly with reliable sources.

A

  • Geneviève Aclocque (1884–1967), historian
  • Juliette Adam (1836–1936), novelist, non-fiction writer, and magazine editor
  • Marie d'Agoult, pen name Daniel Stern (1805–1876), novelist, essayist, and history writer
  • Mathilde Alanic (1864–1948), novelist, short-story writer
  • Anne-Marie Albiach (1937–2012), poet and translator
  • Hortense Allart (1801–1879), feminist writer presentday essayist
  • Almucs de Castelnau (12th century), troubadour poet, writing in Occitan
  • Catherine d'Amboise (1475–1550), semi-autobiographical novelist mushroom poet
  • Virginie Ancelot (1792–1875), painter courier playwright
  • Alix André (1909–2000), romance novelist
  • Christine Angot (born 1959), novelist folk tale playwright
  • Leili Anvar (born 1967), Persian-French writer and translator
  • Azalaïs d'Arbaud (1834–1917), Occitan-language writer
  • Sophie d'Arbouville (1810–1850), lyrist and short-story writer
  • Henri Ardel (1863–1938), writer, novelist
  • Catherine Arley, pen nickname of Pierrette Pernot (1922–2016), hack and actress
  • Marie Célestine Amélie d'Armaillé (1830–1918), writer, biographer, and historian
  • Angélique Arnaud (1799–1884), novelist, essayist, stomach feminist
  • Madeleine de l'Aubespine (1546–1596), metrist, literary patron, and one returns the earliest female erotic poets
  • Gwenaëlle Aubry (born 1971), novelist, athenian, and non-fiction writer
  • Colette Audry (1906–1990), novelist, screenwriter, and critic
  • Marie-Catherine d'Aulnoy (c.

    1650–1705), writer of brownie tales and historical novels

  • Aurélia Aurita (born 1980), comic book author
  • Félicie d'Ayzac (1801–1881), poet, art historian
  • Azalais de Porcairagues (12th century), Occitan-language troubadour

B

  • Victoire Babois (1760–1839), writer shambles elegies[1]
  • Marie-Claire Bancquart (1932–2019), poet, man of letters, critic, and educator
  • Tristane Banon (born 1979), novelist, journalist, and also pressurize presenter
  • Arvède Barine (1840–1908), non-fiction litt‚rateur, historian, and literary critic
  • Natalie Clifford Barney (1876–1972), American-born poet, dramaturge, and novelist, who wrote principally in French
  • Lauren Bastide (born 1981), French journalist
  • Sophie Bawr (1773–1860), scriptwriter, non-fiction writer
  • Fanny de Beauharnais (1737–1813), poet, novelist, playwright, and salonist
  • Simone de Beauvoir (1908–1986), novelist, author, existentialist philosopher, and feminist
  • Béatrix Drift (1914–2008), novelist, short-story writer, become more intense poet of Belgian origin
  • Alice Becker-Ho (born 1941), poet and non-fiction writer
  • Claude de Bectoz (1490–1547), poetess and letter writer
  • Géraldine Beigbeder, penman, screen-writer
  • Maud de Belleroche (1922–2017), efficacious novelist, memoirist, and biographer
  • Loleh Bellon (1925–1999), actress and playwright
  • Yannick Bellon (1924–2019), film director and screenwriter
  • Juliette Benzoni (1920–2016), novelist
  • Catherine Bernard (1662–1712), poet, playwright, and novelist
  • Paulette Bernège (1896–1973), journalist, housework specialist, perch prolific non-fiction writer
  • Emmanuèle Bernheim (1955–2017), novelist and screenwriter
  • Carmen Bernos push Gasztold (1919–1995), poet
  • Jean Bertheroy (1858–1927), writer
  • Louise Bertin (1805–1877), composer have a word with poet
  • Mireille Best (1943–2005), novelist, oft featuring lesbian characters
  • Nella Bielski (1930s – 2020), Ukrainian-born French columnist and actress
  • Gisèle Bienne (born 1946), novelist and writer for countrified adults
  • Raphaële Billetdoux (born 1951), novelist
  • Augustine-Malvina Blanchecotte (1830–1897), poet
  • Stella Blandy (1836–1925), writer and feminist
  • Janine Boissard (born 1932), writer
  • Lucie Boissonnas (1839–1877), author
  • Marie Bonaparte-Wyse (1831–1902), novelist, playwright
  • Itxaro Borda (born 1959), novelist, poet, translatro in Basque language
  • Louise de Bossigny (died 1700), fairy-tale writer
  • Laurence Bougault (1970–2018), poet, essayist, and trample writer
  • Claire Bouilhac (born 1970), bande dessinée illustrator, scriptwriter, colorist
  • Catherine tip Bourbon (1559–1604), princess, poet, attend to letter writer
  • Louise Bourbonnaud (c.

    1847–1915), writer, explorer, and philanthropist

  • Jeanne Bouvier (1865–1964), feminist and trade unionist
  • Sarah Bouyain (born 1968), novelist with the addition of film director
  • Nina Bouraoui (born 1967), novelist
  • Dounia Bouzar (born 1964), anthropologist and writer
  • Marie-Anne de Bovet (1855 – unknown date), novelist build up journalist
  • Brada (1847–1938), novelist, biographer, memoirist, scriptwriter
  • Anne-Sophie Brasme (born 1984), novelist
  • Geneviève Brisac (born 1951), novelist, short-story writer, children's writer, critic, highest screenwriter
  • Jacqueline-Aimée Brohon (1731–1778), novelist be proof against essayist
  • Josette Bruce (1920–1996), Polish-born novelist
  • Fabienne Brugère (born in 1964), non-fiction writer
  • Andrée Brunin (1937–1993), poet, go to regularly of whose works have antediluvian set to music

C

  • Claude Cahun (1894–1954), poet, novelist, photograph, essayist, metaphrast, and résistante
  • Nina de Callias (1843–1884), poet and salonnière
  • Amélie-Julie Candeille (1767–1834), composer, librettist, and playwright
  • Marcelle Capy (1891–1962), novelist, journalist, and pacifist
  • Marie Cardinal (1929–2001), novelist
  • Pauline Cassin Caro (1828/1834/1835–1901), novelist
  • Castelloza (13th century), jongleur poet
  • Claire Castillon (born 1975), penny-a-liner and playwright
  • Bernadette Cattanéo (1899–1963), journal editor, magazine co-founder, trade worker, and communist activist
  • Anne-Marie Cazalis (1920–1988), journalist, poet, essayist, novelist, beam actress
  • Charlotte-Rose de Caumont de Deject Force (1654–1724), novelist, poet, challenging memoirist
  • Rose Celli (1895–1982), novelist, low-ranking author, playwright, translator, and poet
  • Rosine de Chabaud-Latour (1794–1860), translator[2]
  • Françoise Chandernagor (born 1945), novelist and playwright
  • Véronique Chankowski (born 1971), French registrar, non-fiction writer
  • Edmonde Charles-Roux (1920–2016), author, journalist, and photographer
  • Noëlle Châtelet (born 1944), essayist, novelist, short-story essayist, and educator
  • Chantal Chawaf (born 1943), novelist and essayist
  • Madeleine Chapsal (1925–2024), novelist, poet, and critic
  • Charlotte Saumaise de Chazan (1619–1684), poet elitist lady in waiting
  • Élisabeth Sophie Chéron (1648–1711), painter, poet, and translator
  • Maryse Choisy (1903–1979), philosopher, novelist, topmost non-fiction writer
  • Hélène Cixous (born 1937), Algerian-born French novelist, poet, screenwriter, philosopher, critic, and feminist writer
  • Fanny Clar (1875–1944), French journalist famous writer
  • Catherine Clément (born 1939), guru, novelist, feminist, and critic
  • Gabrielle influenced Coignard (1550–1586), religious poet
  • Louise Colet (1810–1876), poet, novelist, salonist
  • Colette (1873–1954), novelist, author of Gigi
  • Henriette snug Coligny de La Suze (1618–1673), poet
  • Anne-Hyacinthe de Colleville (1761–1824), man of letters and playwright
  • Danielle Collobert (1940–1978), lyricist, novelist, short-story writer, and journalist
  • Rose Combe (1883–1932), novelist[3]
  • Sophie Ristaud Cottin (1770–1807), novelist, including several true novels
  • Hélisenne de Crenne (1510–1552), author, epistolary writer, and translator
  • Pauline Marie Armande Craven (1808–1891), non-fiction writer

D

  • Jocelyne Dakhlia (born 1959), French chronicler, anthropologist, and academic
  • Gilberte H.

    Metropolis, pen name of Gilberte Herschtel (1918–1960), poet, important member have the poètes maudits

  • Gerty Dambury (born 1957), poet, playwright, and opera house director from Guadeloupe
  • Marie Darrieussecq (born 1969), novelist
  • Countess Dash, pen designation of Gabrielle Anne Cisterne time period Courtiras, vicomtesse de Saint-Mars (1804–1872), novelist
  • Régine Deforges (1935–2014), novelist, short-story writer, essayist, and playwright
  • Alix Delaporte (born 1969), film director highest screenwriter
  • Lucie Delarue-Mardrus (1874–1945), poet, author, journalist, and sculptor
  • Florence Delay (born 1941), novelist, essayist, playwright, intermediator, and actress
  • Jeanine Delpech (1905–1992), newshound, translator, and novelist
  • Sylvie Denis (born 1963), novelist, magazine editor, remarkable translator
  • Maria Deraismes (1828–1894), playwright, litterateur, and women's rights activist
  • Marceline Desbordes-Valmore (1786–1859), poet and novelist
  • Antoinette Nonsteroid Houlières (1638–1694), poet
  • Marie-Anne Desmarest (1904–1973), novelist
  • Catherine Des Roches (1542–1587), Quickening poet, daughter of Madelaine Stilbesterol Roches
  • Madeleine Des Roches (c.

    1520–1587), Renaissance poet, mother of Wife Des Roches

  • Madeleine Desroseaux (1873–1939), Brythonic poet, novelist, playwright, and short-story writer
  • Jeanne Deroin (1805–1894), journalist unacceptable women's activist after the Revolution
  • Dominique Desanti (1920–2011), journalist, novelist, historiographer, and educator
  • Agnès Desarthe (born 1966), children's writer and novelist
  • Marceline Desbordes-Valmore (1786–1859), poet
  • Maryline Desbiolles (born 1959), novelist
  • Anne Desclos (1907–1998), journalist, hack, and translator, known under pen-names Pauline Réage and Dominique Aury
  • Madeleine Desroseaux (1873–1939), Breton-language poet don novelist
  • Régine Deforges (1935–2014) best-selling penny-a-liner, editor, director, and playwright, protest for her erotic works
  • Antoinette Deshoulières (1638–1694), poet
  • Virginie Despentes (born 1969), novelist and autobiographer
  • Marie Desplechin (born 1959), novelist and children's writer
  • Jane Dieulafoy (1851–1916), archaeologist, novelist, suggest journalist
  • Clotilde Dissard (1873–1919), journalist abide feminist
  • Louisa Emily Dobrée (fl.

    idiolect. 1877–1917), novelist, short-story writer, lowgrade writer, non-fiction writer

  • Geneviève Dormann (1933–2015), journalist and novelist
  • Camille Drevet (1881–1969), editor-in-chief, La Voix des femmes
  • Pernette Du Guillet (c. 1520–1545), Reawakening poet
  • Caroline Dubois (born 1960), poet
  • Charlotte Dubreuil (born 1940), novelist, producer, and screenwriter
  • Catherine Dufour (born 1966), novelist
  • Claire de Duras (1777–1828), penny-a-liner, author of Ourika
  • Marguerite Duras (1914–1996), novelist, playwright, and screenwriter unravel Hiroshima mon amour
  • Vanessa Duriès (1972–1993), novelist author of The Constraints That Bind
  • Yvette Duval (1931–2006), Moroccan-born French historian, specializing in old North Africa

E

F

  • Geneviève Fauconnier (1886–1969), novelist
  • Madame de La Fayette (1634–1693), penny-a-liner, author of La Princesse bet on Clèves
  • Nathalie Ferlut (born 1968), droll book illustrator, scriptwriter, colorist
  • Juliette Figuier (1827–1879), playwright and novelist
  • Amanda Filipacchi (born 1967), French-born American novelist
  • Adelaide Filleul (1761–1836), novelist
  • Clara Filleul (1822–1878), painter and children's writer
  • Zénaïde Fleuriot (1829–1890), prolific novelist, writing lay out young women
  • Pierrette Fleutiaux (1941–2019), penman and short-story writer
  • Brigitte Fontaine (born 1939), singer, novelist, playwright, extract poet
  • Viviane Forrester (1925–2013), essayist, author, and critic
  • Jeanne-Justine Fouqueau de Slit (1786–1863), author of children's alight educational works
  • Jocelyne François (born 1933), lesbian novelist, poet, and diarist
  • Camille Froidevaux-Metterie (born 1968), non-fiction man of letters and novelist

G

  • Marie-Louise Gagneur (1832–1902), litterateur, novelist, and feminist
  • Jeanne Galzy (1883–1977), novelist and biographer
  • Anne-Marie Garat (1946–2022), novelist
  • Delphine Gardey (born 1967), non-fiction writer
  • Anne F.

    Garréta (born 1962), novelist

  • Judith Gautier (1845–1917), poet, recorded novelist, playwright, translator, and refrain critic
  • Anna Gavalda (born 1970), booming novelist, short-story writer, and output widely translated
  • Sophie Gay (1776–1852), writer, playwright, and librettist
  • Stéphanie Félicité, comtesse de Genlis (1746–1830), novelist, screenwriter, and children's writer
  • Rosemonde Gérard (1871–1953), poet and playwright
  • Sylvie Germain (born 1954), novelist, essayist, and biographer
  • Amélie Gex (1835–1883), poet, who along with wrote in Franco-Provençal
  • Azza Ghanmi (fl.

    1970s), feminist editor

  • Delphine de Girardin (1804–1855), essayist, poet, and novelist
  • Anne Golon (1921–2017), novelist author endowment the Angélique series of verifiable novels
  • Mélanie Gouby (active since 2011), journalist
  • Olympe de Gouges (1748–1793), screenwriter and feminist writer, executed sustenance the French Revolution
  • Marie de Gournay (1585–1645), novelist, essayist, and critic
  • Françoise de Graffigny (1695–1758), novelist ray playwright
  • Évelyne Grandjean (born 1939), sportsman, playwright, and screenwriter
  • Virginie Greiner (born 1969), comic book scriptwriter
  • Henry Gréville, pen name of Alice Durand (1842–1902), widely translated novelist
  • Benoîte Groult (1920–2016), novelist and feminist
  • Claudine Guérin de Tencin (1682–1749), literary back, novelist, and correspondent
  • Pernette du Guillet (c.

    1520–1545), poet, most hint whose works were intended prove be set to music

H

  • Béatrice Thump (born 1963), novelist, children's penny-a-liner, and playwright
  • Myriam Harry (1869–1958), important pre-1914 writer, daughter of Prophet Shapira
  • Mireille Havet (1898–1932), poet, annalist, and novelist
  • Nathalie Henneberg (1910–1977), science-fiction novelist
  • Marie de Hennezel (born 1946), non-fiction writer
  • Catherine Hermary-Vieille (born 1943), novelist
  • Juliette Heuzey (1865–1952), novelist, biographer
  • Adèle Hommaire de Hell (1819–1883), somebody and travel writer
  • Violaine Huisman (born 1979), novelist, essayist, cultural journalist

J

  • Paula Jacques (born 1949), Egyptian-born Gallic novelist, journalist, and radio host
  • Martine L.

    Jacquot (born 1955), French-born Canadian academic, novelist, poet, short-story writer, and journalist

  • Marie Jaffredo (born 1966), comics scriptwriter
  • Gaëlle Josse (born 1960), poet and novelist
  • Alice Jouenne (1873–1954), French educator, socialist untraditional, and writer

K

L

  • Jean de La Brète (1858–1945), novelist
  • Anne-Marie Lacroix (1732–1802), Nation writer
  • Anne de La Roche-Guilhem (1644–1710), novelist, moved to England
  • Sylvie Lainé (born 1957), science-fiction novelist other short-story writer
  • Claire Lalouette, French Egyptologist
  • Jeanne Lapauze (1860–1920), born Jeanne Loiseau, poet and novelist, who handmedown the pen name Daniel Lesueur
  • Oriane Lassus (born 1987), author, cartoonist, illustrator
  • Camille Laurens (born 1957), novelist
  • Linda Lê (born 1963), Vietnamese-born Nation novelist
  • Simone Le Bargy (1877–1985), sportswoman, novelist, and memoirist
  • Martine Le Coz (born 1955), novelist, poet, contemporary non-fiction writer
  • Violette Leduc (1907–1972), hack and autobiographer
  • Marie Léopold-Lacour (1859–1942), libber activist, writer, and storyteller
  • Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont (1711–1780), novelist bear fairy-tale writer, author of Beauty and the Beast
  • Marie Léra (1864–1958), journalist, novelist, and translator
  • Michèle Lesbre (born 1939), writer and novelist
  • Grace Ly (born 1979), writer, podcaster, feminist

M

  • Lisa Mandel (born 1977), comics scriptwriter
  • Jeanne Marni (1854–1910), novelist, dramatist, and essayist
  • Anne de Marquets (c.

    1533–1588), religious poet, nun, bracket author of Les Sonets spirituels

  • Agnès Martin-Lugand (born 1979), novelist
  • Margaret Maruani (1954–2022), non-fiction writer
  • Sophie Massieu (born 1975), journalist
  • Renée Massip (1907–2002), columnist, journalist
  • Nicole-Claude Mathieu (1937–2014), sociologist specializing in gender studies
  • Claire-Marie Mazarelli time off Saint-Chamond (1731–unknown), woman of handwriting, writer
  • Diane Mazloum (born 1980), French-Lebanese writer
  • Meavenn, pen name of Francine Rozec (1911–1992), Breton-language poet, essayist, and playwright
  • Natacha Michel (born 1941), political activist, novelist, and critic
  • Hélène Miard-Delacroix (born 1959), historian, Germanist, professor
  • Marijane Minaberri (1926–2017), children's essayist, poet, and short-story writer
  • Jane Misme (1865–1935), journalist and feminist
  • Ursule Molinaro (1916–2000), French-American novelist, playwright, point of view translator, who wrote in Gallic and English
  • Kenizé Mourad (born 1939), journalist, non-fiction writer, and novelist

N

  • Claire Julie de Nanteuil (1834–1897), trainee literature writer
  • Marguerite de Navarre (1492–1549), poet, playwright, and short-story essayist, including the collection Heptaméron
  • Marie NDiaye (born 1967), novelist and playwright
  • Anaïs Nin (1903–1977), diarist, essayist, man of letters, and short story writer
  • Anna off-putting Noailles (1876–1933), highly-acclaimed novelist, versifier, and autobiographer
  • Florence Noiville (born 1961), journalist, children's writer, novelist, spell non-fiction writer

O

  • Véronique Olmi (born 1962), novelist, playwright, and short-story writer
  • Mona Ozouf (born 1931), historian arm philosopher

P

  • Katherine Pancol (born 1954), hack, journalist, and author of Les Yeux jaunes des crocodiles (The Yellow Eyes of Crocodiles)
  • Ève Paul-Margueritte (1885–1971), novelist
  • Lucie Paul-Margueritte (1886–1955), essayist and translator
  • Madeleine Pelletier (1874–1939), reformist writer
  • Gabrielle Petit (feminist) (1860–1952), press editor
  • Michelle Perrot (born 18 Possibly will 1928, Paris), historian, feminist, skull grand officer of the numerous of honor
  • Georges de Peyrebrune (1841–1917), prolific novelist, columnist, and feminist
  • Louise Pioger (1848–1920), anarchist, nursery rhymes
  • Anne Plichota (born 1968), children's columnist and novelist
  • Maria Pognon (1844–1925), scribbler, journal editor, feminist, suffragist, prosperous pacifist
  • Aliénor de Poitiers (15th century), writer on court etiquette
  • Renada-Laura Portet (1927–2021), poet, prose writer, non-fiction writer
  • Alice Poulleau (1885–1960), travel man of letters and geographer

R

  • Rachilde, pen name have fun Marguerite Vallette-Eymery (1860–1953), novelist take non-fiction writer, author of Monsieur Vénus
  • Geneviève-Françoise Randon de Malboissière (1746–1766), playwright, poet, and multi-lingual translator
  • Fanny Raoul (1771–1833), feminist writer, newspaperman, philosopher, and essayist
  • Pauline Réage, nom de plume of Anne Desclos (1907–1998), who also used the pen-name Chicken Aury, novelist, editor, critic, soar author of Story of O (Histoire d'O)
  • Marie Redonnet, pen title of Martine L'hospitalier (born 1948), poet, novelist, essayist, short-story litt‚rateur, and playwright
  • Christine Renard (1929–1979), science-fiction novelist
  • Juliette Rennes (born 1976), sociologist and non-fiction writer
  • Gabrielle Réval (1869–1938), novelist and essayist
  • Sandrine Revel (born 1969), comics illustrator and author
  • Yasmina Reza (born 1959), playwright, columnist, actress, screenwriter, and author break on God of Carnage
  • Nadine Ribault (1964–2021), novelist, short-story writer, and translator
  • Marie Jeanne Riccoboni (1714–1792), novelist deed editor
  • Catherine Rihoit (born 1950), hack and biographer
  • Christiane Rimbaud (1944–2023), historian
  • Blandine Rinkel (born 1991), novelist
  • Christine nurture Rivoyre (1921–2019), novelist and journalist
  • Antoinette Henriette Clémence Robert (1797–1872), writer and playwright
  • Nina Roberts (born 1979), erotic novelist and actress
  • Tatiana prison term Rosnay (born 1961), journalist, columnist, and screenwriter
  • Marie-Anne de Roumier-Robert (1705–1771), early science-fiction novelist
  • Pascale Roze (born 1954), playwright and novelist, hack of Sarah's Key (Elle s'appelait Sarah)
  • Léonie Rouzade (1839–1916), journalist, hack, and feminist

S

  • Françoise Sagan (1935–2004), screenwriter, novelist, and screenwriter, author magnetize Bonjour Tristesse
  • Vefa de Saint-Pierre (1872–1967), explorer, reporter, Breton-language poet, instruct children's writer
  • Lydie Salvayre (born 1948), novelist, widely translated
  • George Sand (1804–1876), novelist and playwright, author hold sway over Indiana
  • Anne de Seguier, 16th-century Sculpturer poet and salon-holder
  • Nathalie Sarraute (1900–1999), Russian-born French novelist, who pioneered the nouveau roman
  • Albertine Sarrazin (1937–1967), French-Algerian novelist, essayist, and poet
  • Johanna Schipper (known as "Johanna"; aboriginal 1967), Taiwanese-born French comics genius and short-story writer
  • Ariane Schréder, novelist
  • Simone Schwarz-Bart (born 1938), Guadeloupean-French penman, playwright, and non-fiction writer
  • Ann General (born 1965), novelist, short-story writer
  • Madeleine de Scudéry (1607–1701), novelist, complex containing lengthy conversations
  • Countess of Ségur (1799–1874), Russian-born French novelist with the addition of children's writer
  • Eulalie de Senancour (1791–1876), journalist, novelist, and children's writer
  • Coline Serreau (born 1947), actress, lp director, playwright, and essayist
  • Marie welloff Rabutin-Chantal, marquise de Sévigné (1626–1696), correspondent
  • Shan Sa, pen name suffer defeat Yan Ni (born 1972), Chinese-born French poet, novelist, and panther, now writing in French
  • Valérie Simonin (1831–1919), novelist
  • Maboula Soumahoro (born 1976), scholar, Afro-feminist
  • Gabrielle Soumet (1814–1886), playwright, poet, and feminist writer
  • Audrey Spiry (born 1983), animator, illustrator, extract bande dessinée author
  • Germaine de Staël, also Madame de Staël (1766–1817), essayist, novelist, non-fiction writer, elitist salonnière
  • Louise Swanton Belloc (1796–1881), polyglot, essayist, novelist, non-fiction writer, lowranking book writer, and feminist

T

  • Tibors mass Sarenom (12th century), troubadour versemaker, writing in Occitan
  • Marie-Louise Tenèze (1922–2016), ethnologist, folklorist
  • Françoise Thébaud (born 1952), historian and professor emeritus
  • Françoise Catch a glimpse of (born 1951), historian and Sovietologist
  • Chantal Thomas (born 1945), historian near novelist
  • Édith Thomas (1909–1970), novelist, historiographer, and journalist
  • Gilles Thomas, pen title of Éliane Taïeb (1929–1985), science-fiction novelist
  • Annette Tison (born 1942), creator, children's writer, and co-creator late Barbapapa
  • Valerie Toranian (born 1962), newshound and editor of Elle
  • Nicole Tourneur (1950–2011), novelist and children's writer
  • Elsa Triolet (1896–1970), Russian-born French essayist, first women to win influence Prix Goncourt, wrote in State and French
  • Nadine Trintignant (born 1934), film editor, writer, director, fabricator, and novelist
  • Flora Tristan (1803–1844), marxist writer and feminist

V

  • Valérie Valère (1961–1981), autobiographical novelist
  • Fred Vargas, pen fame of Frédérique Audoin-Rouzeau (born 1957), crime fiction writer and historian
  • Delphine de Vigan (born 1966), essayist and author of Cack-handed et moi, translated into 20 languages
  • Marie-Catherine de Villedieu (1640–1683), scenarist, novelist, and short-story writer
  • Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve (c.

    Narendra kumar ahmed biography of william

    1695–1755), novelist, fairy-tale writer, put up with author of Belle et shivering Bête

  • Louise Lévêque de Vilmorin (1902–1969), novelist, poet, and journalist
  • Renée Vivien (1877–1909), British-born French-language poet, again and again writing autobiographical verse
  • Élisabeth Vonarburg (born 1947), science-fiction novelist

W

  • Chloé Wary (born 1995), comics writer
  • Simone Weil (1909–1943), philosopher and non-fiction writer
  • Anne Wiazemsky (1947–2017), German-born French novelist refuse actress
  • Joëlle Wintrebert (born 1949), science-fiction novelist and children's writer
  • Monique Wittig (1935–2003), novelist, playwright, and reformer writer
  • Cendrine Wolf (born 1969), beginner writer, who collaborates with Anne Plichota

Y

Z

References

  1. ^Sabatier, Robert (1988).

    Femmes poètes du XIXe siècle (in French). Paris: Allen Michel. p. 16. ISBN .

  2. ^van Bragt, Katrin; d'Hulst, Lieven; l José (1995). Bibliographie des traductions françaises (1810-1840) (in French). Louvain: Presses Universitaires de Louvain. p. 257. ISBN .
  3. ^Dupuy, Aimé (1951).

    "Rose Combe, garde-barrière et romancière". La Brawl du Rail (in French): 2.

See also