Colette
Colette's fame extends to being probably the only female writer known by her mononym—She is always and only Colette, though in fact this most feminine of names was her surname: She was born Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette on 28 January 1873 in the French village of Saint-Sauveur-en-Puisaye.
Her work—mostly at novella length, short and sharp—survives because her chief subject is one that never goes out of fashion. "Love, the bread and butter of my pen," she wrote, though she put it more bluntly in her book The Pure and the Impure (1932): "The flesh, always the flesh, the mysteries and betrayals and frustrations and surprises of the flesh." The story of Colette and her work is one of the most astonishing in modern literature. She was a pioneer of the French school of autofiction (autobiographical fiction), writing about women's lives in ways that broke new ground. Her books were simultaneously popular and acclaimed—read by critics and the public alike—not to mention scandalous. And she made of her life a project just as fascinating and subversive as her books.
Among Colette's best known works are the "Claudine" novels, "La naissance du jour," "Gigi," "Chéri," "The Tendrils of the Vine,"... She was also a mime, actress, journalist and a woman of letters. Colette was the first woman to be elected to the Académie Goncourt and the Belgian Royal Academy, both indicia of respect for her writing.

Paris 1900

Colette

Colette, l'insoumise

Paris Was a Woman

Gigi

Red Carnations
La gatta

Mitsou

Ladies Lake

The Other Woman

Break of Day

Chéri

Julie de Carneilhan

Divine

Journey to Italy

The Seven Deadly Sins

Chéri

Mademoiselle Gigi

Gigi

La flamme cachée

Claudine at School

La vagabonda

Divine

The Wanderer

The Wanderer

Minne

Julie de Carneilhan

The Game of Love

The Ripening Seed

Claudine à l'école

L’invidia

Claudine

Claudine
