80 reward points! ! A French female literati from modern times. I have forgotten her name. The only thing I remember is that she was very young. When she was in college, she published a book.

Marie Darieseck

Marie Darieseck was born in Bayonne, southern France, in 1969. She did not want to go to school when she was a child, but she loved writing. Poetry, he won the "Mother's Day Poetry Award" in school at the age of 7, and was admitted to the famous Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris at the age of 21. At the age of 27, he began to study psychoanalysis and published his debut novel "Sow Girl", which became a global success. After "Sow Girl", she successively created many works such as "Ghost", "Sea Sickness", and "Hometown".

Fran?oise Sagan

On June 21, 1935, Fran?oise Sagan was born in Caillac, Lot, in southern France. In a village, his original name was Fran?oise Quare. Her father was an engineer and came from a wealthy family with a spacious and luxurious house in Paris. After the liberation of France, she came to live in Paris, but her grades in school were mediocre. When she was 12 years old, she entered a small convent called "The Birds" and was expelled for not seeking advancement. From the age of 15, she often went to the basement bar of Place Saint-Germain-des-Prés in Paris to drink, dance, and listen to jazz music. As a result, she failed her high school graduation exam at the age of 16, and failed to pass the university entrance exam at the age of 19.

Sagan was fond of having fun and did not do well in school, but he liked to read alone the works of modern writers from Proust to Faulkner, especially existential writers such as Sartre, and thus embarked on a creative career road. She has a talent for writing and her creative path is smooth sailing. When she was 18 years old, she wrote the novel "Hello, Sorrow" in just one and a half months. She took the surname "Sagan" from a prince couple in Proust's novel as her pen name. It was published by Julliard in early 1954. The publisher published the novel.

These two are famous, but Sagan never went to college. . .

The others can’t be considered modern, right? Could it be Duras (the one who wrote about lovers...

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