“Our
life is a book that writes itself and whose principal themes sometimes escape
us. We are like characters in a novel who do not always understand what the
author wants of them.” – Julien Green
The first non-French national (he’s
American) to be admitted to the famed Académie Française, Green was born on
this date in 1900 to American parents living in France. After spending time in America in his late
teens, he returned to France and in 1922 –
after a false start as a painter – began a nearly 80-year writing career.
He remained there for
the rest of his long life (he died in 1998) except during World
War II, when he went back to the U.S. There, he played a major role in the United States
Office of War Information as the “French” voice for Voice of America and keeping up contacts with the French Resistance.
Most noted for his 19-volume diary, spanning some 80 years, Green gave the
world a unique window on the artistic and literary scene in Paris. The popularity of his diary was, he said,
based on his free form and spontaneous writing style, folksy and highly
readable.
“The secret is to write just anything,
to dare to write just anything,” he said,
“because when you write just anything, you begin to say what is
important.”
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