Suzanne Martel

Suzanne Martel

Martel in the late 1970s
Born Suzanne Chouinard
(1924-10-08)October 8, 1924
Quebec City, Quebec, Canada
Died July 29, 2012(2012-07-29) (aged 87)
Ste-Adèle, Quebec
Occupation Novelist, short story writer, columnist
Genre Canadian literature
Children's literature, adventure fiction, science fiction
Spouse Maurice Martel
Children 6
Relatives Monique Corriveau, sister
Website
suzannemartel.com

Suzanne Chouinard Martel (October 8, 1924 – July 29, 2012) was a French Canadian journalist, novelist and children's writer.[1]

Life

Suzanne Chouinard was the daughter of Francis Xavier Chouinard, clerk of Quebec City between 1927 and 1961 and Lady Couillard, who resided at rue de Bernières in Quebec City until 1963. Her younger sister Monique became well known in Quebec as Monique Corriveau, the author of more than twenty novels for teenagers.

Amazed by the universe of the novels of Rudyard Kipling (The Jungle Book), the Chouinard sisters invented an imaginary country, the Gotal, home to those they call "People in the wall". As children and teenagers, they wrote the adventures of these forty fictional characters they get to know as well as their own family. They were so attached to their writing that, when they reached twelve years old, their mother reportedly forbade them to write more than eight hours a day. Later, when they reached adulthood, they selected, in turn, a Montcorbier clan member and wrote of his adventures. This would become the most voluminous saga of the literary history of Quebec. Prior to the death of Monique Corriveau in 1976, the two sisters had written one for the other fifteen novels on their respective heroes. This saga remains largely unpublished to date.

Suzanne Martel studied at École des Ursulines, Quebec, then continued her studies in literature and languages at the University of Toronto.

She worked as a journalist for Le Soleil in 1945, then as a freelancer in 1946.

After World War II, Martel came to live in Outremont with Maurice Martel, her husband, who was a lawyer. In subsequent years, the writer gave birth to six boys (Paul, Bernard, Luc, Éric, Alain-Anadi and Yves) who quickly became her primary audience.

Martel's first book was published in 1963, Quatre Montréalais en l'an 3000, a young-adult science fiction novel (published in English as The City Under Ground, 1964).[2] She received the prize of the Canadian Association of French-language publishers. This classic children's book – which is said to be the first science fiction novel in Quebec – is still being studied in some schools. (It is known best as Surréal 3000, the title introduced for a revised edition in 1966, published in English as The City Underground, 1982.)[2]

In 1971, she founded the weekly children's publication Safari in the newspaper Montréal-Matin. She was an editor until 1974 when the newspaper was sold to La Presse.

Subsequently, Martel published many novels that made her one of the greatest novelists of adventure both in Quebec and Canada.

On July 29, 2012, Martel died surrounded by her family in Ste-Adèle. [3][4]

Awards

Martel's book Jeanne, Fille du Roy (translated as The King's Daughter), is frequently read in highschool in Quebec and Ontario. She has won numerous awards, including:

Works

English, The City Under Ground, illustrated by Don Sibley (Viking Press, 1964, LCCN 64-22968), translated by Norah Smaridge[2]
Revised and issued as Surréal 3000 (Macmillan Canada, 1966) – "Edited with exercises and vocabulary by H. C. Steels; ill. by Lee Clifton. [...] French, with English preface and notes." LCCN 66-67125
English, The City Underground (1982), transl. David Homel [2]
English translation, The King's Daughter (Douglas & McIntyre, 1980, OCLC 8661387)
English, Peewee (Scholastic, 1982, OCLC 15918973)
  1. Menfou Carcajou (Leméac, 1980)
  2. La baie du Nord (1980)
  3. Une belle journée pour mourir (1980 or 1993?)
  4. Les chemins d'eau (1993?, OCLC 56249646)
English, Robot Alert (Kids Can Press, 1985, OCLC 869380895)[2]

Martel is also the author of the Montcorbier series, developed during childhood with her younger sister Monique Corriveau (another children's writer, as an adult).

Her books have been translated into several languages including Spanish and Japanese.

Another dozen or so were self-published for the family only.

Her memoirs, in five tomes, were also printed for the family and close friends.

References

  1. Stott, Raymond E. Jones & Jon C. (2000). Canadian Children's Books: a critical guide to authors and illustrators (Rev. ed.). Don Mills, Ont. [u.a.]: Oxford Univ. Press. p. 305. ISBN 9780195412222. Retrieved 2 October 2013. Born: 8 October 1924, in Quebec City
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Martel, Suzanne". Revised May 8, 2015. The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (sf-encyclopedia.com). Retrieved 2015-08-06. Entry by 'JC', John Clute.
  3. "Statement by the Honourable James Moore, Minister of Canadian Heritage and Official Languages, on the Passing of Suzanne Martel". Canadian Heritage. Ottawa. July 31, 2012. Retrieved December 22, 2012.
  4. "Mme Suzanne Martel (née Chouinard)". Dignity Memorial (in French). Retrieved December 22, 2012.
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