Anne Duguël

Anne Duguël
Born Anne Liger-Belair
(1945-08-01)August 1, 1945
Ixelles, Belgium
Died May 21, 2015(2015-05-21) (aged 69)
Puycelsi, France
Occupation Author
Language French
Ethnicity European
Genre Fantasy, Children's
Website
gudule.over-blog.com

Anne Duguël is the pen name of Anne Liger-Belair (August 1, 1945 – May 21, 2015), a Belgian francophone author. She writes both children's and adult literature, and has also been known to use the pen names Gudule, Anne Guduël, or Anne Carali. Duguël is known for her fantastique works, which were inspired by the dark side of fairytales and writers such as Jean Ray and Michel de Ghelderode.[1]

Early life

Duguël was born in Ixelles, Belgium, the only daughter in a family of boys. According to French newspaper Le Monde, she always wanted to be a writer, finishing her first book at the tender age of 5. Raised in a strict Catholic household, Duguël became fascinated with fairytales and dark folk stories. Influenced by Jean Ray, she wrote "Le Couvent maudit" ("The Cursed Convent") in sixth grade. Thirty years later, this story became her novel "L'Ecole qui n'existait pas" ("The School That Didn't Exist").[1]

Career

Duguël studied interior decorating in Brussels before traveling to Lebanon to live with her brother at the age of 19 after a failed romance and the birth of her first child.[1] In Lebanon, she worked as a tailor and journalist. While living there, she met cartoonist Paul Karali, sometimes called Carali, whom she married and had two children with, Olivier and Mélaka.[2] Karali and Duguël left Lebanon for Paris, where she raised their children and continued her work as a journalist, as well as writing comic scenarios for publications such as Charlie Hebdo, Fluide Glacial, and Hara-Kiri. She appeared frequently on French radio program "Radio Libertaire," a show dedicated to comic strips.[3] Duguël also started writing stories for French children's magazines at this time.[4]

Duguël's first book, "Prince Charmant, poil aux dents," was published until 1987. The book was a preview of the fantastique writing style Duguël became known for: Three maids of honor escape a wedding by entering a painting. While there, one of them marries a charming prince who turns out to be a hideous monster.[4] She became a prolific writer, publishing several books a year, exploring topics such as autism, racism, paranoia and homelessness all with a touch of surrealism.[3][5]

Some of her best-known works include "La Bibliothecaire," the story of a boy who dislikes reading, befriends a mysterious young woman and aids her in her quest to find a magic grimoire; and "Entre chien et louve," the story of an old man who dies and returns to his beloved by inhabiting the body of a dog she adopted.[3]

Death

News of Duguël's death broke on May 21, 2015, to stunned and saddened reactions from the literary community.[3] Her writing, which she described as, "for youth, above all, but for adults a bit as well," is remembered as both creative and emotive, bringing a touch of the bizarre to real-world situations to evoke empathy in the reader.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Catinchi, Philippe-Jean (May 29, 2015). "Anne Liger-Belair". Le Monde. Retrieved June 1, 2015.
  2. "Gudule". Babelio. Retrieved June 1, 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Ricou, Fred (May 21, 2015). "Gudule est décédée... Grande tristesse!". Les Histoires Sans Fin. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  4. 1 2 "La Bibliothécaire par Gudule". Etudier.com. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  5. "L'auteure Gudule nous a quitté". actusf.com. Retrieved June 3, 2015.

Further reading

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