Alain-Fournier

pseudonym of
Henri-Alban Fournier
born Oct.
3, 1886, La Chapelle-d’Angillon, Cher,
France
killed in action Sept. 22, 1914, in the
vicinity of Épargue, near Verdun
French
writer whose only completed novel, Le Grand
Meaulnes (1913; The Wanderer, or The Lost
Domain), is a modern classic.
Based on his happy childhood in a remote
village in central France, Alain-Fournier’s
novel reflects his longing for a lost world
of delight. The hero, an idealistic but
forceful schoolboy, runs away and at a
children’s party in a decrepit country house
meets a beautiful girl. The rest of the
novel describes his search for her and for
the house and the mood of wonderment he knew
there. Its outstanding quality is evocation
of an atmosphere of otherworldly nostalgia,
against a realistically observed rural
background. Other works, mainly published
posthumously, include a correspondence (2
vol., 1948) with the critic Jacques Rivière,
his brother-in-law.