Anne Hébert (1916-2000) was one of the most influential and celebrated writers in French Canada, whose work spanned poetry, fiction, and screenwriting. Born in Quebec, her writing is deeply marked by the landscape, culture, and peculiar atmosphere of her homeland. From an early age, she showed remarkable talent, winning the French Academy Prize for "Le Tombeau des rois" (1953), her first collection of poems.
Her later novels, such as "Les Chambres de bois" (1958), "Kamouraska" (1970), and "Les Fous de Bassan" (1982), consolidated her reputation as a master in exploring female psychology, family secrets, guilt, and repression. Hébert's work is characterized by intense lyricism, powerful imagination, and a unique ability to create dense and disturbing atmospheres. She addressed themes such as madness, death, sin, and the search for freedom in often oppressive universes. Recognized with numerous awards and honors, Anne Hébert left a rich and complex literary legacy, being considered a central figure in Canadian and French-Canadian literature. She passed away in 2000.
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