Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)
0 sources
Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)
Summary
Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959) is a literary work[1].
Key Facts
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959) authored Albert Camus[2].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959) authored María Casares[3].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)'s instance of is recorded as literary work[4].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)'s publisher is recorded as Éditions Gallimard[5].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)'s genre is recorded as correspondence[6].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)'s OCLC number is recorded as 1010979515[7].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)'s Bibliothèque nationale de France ID is recorded as 45394376k[8].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)'s language of work or name is recorded as French[9].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)'s country of origin is recorded as France[10].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)'s publication date is recorded as +2017-11-09T00:00:00Z[11].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)'s main subject is recorded as Albert Camus[12].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)'s main subject is recorded as María Casares[13].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)'s described at URL is recorded as http://www.gallimard.fr/Catalogue/GALLIMARD/Blanche/Correspondance65[14].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)'s title is recorded as Albert Camus, Maria Casarès. Correspondance (1944-1959)[15].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)'s author of foreword is recorded as Catherine Camus[16].
- Albert Camus, María Casares. Correspondence (1944-1959)'s form of creative work is recorded as letter collection[17].
Body
Works and Contributions
Authored works include Albert Camus[2], a writer[18], 1913–1960[19], of France[20], awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature[21], specialised in philosophy[22] and María Casares[3], a stage actor[23], 1922–1996[24], of France[25], awarded the Knight of the Legion of Honour[26].