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Penelope Delta (1874–1941)

Autor(a) de A Tale Without a Name

39 Works 198 Membros 10 Críticas

About the Author

Obras por Penelope Delta

A Tale Without a Name (1995) 52 exemplares
Τρελαντώνης (1991) 29 exemplares
Μάγκας (1999) 22 exemplares
Secrets of the Swamp (1986) 18 exemplares
Για την πατρίδα (1994) 13 exemplares
Η ζωή του Χριστού (1990) 3 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome canónico
Delta, Penelope
Nome legal
Δέλτα, Πηνελόπη
Data de nascimento
1874
Data de falecimento
1941-05-02
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
Greek
País (no mapa)
Greece
Local de nascimento
Alexandria, Egypt
Local de falecimento
Athens, Greece
Locais de residência
Alexandria, Egypt
Athens, Greece
Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Ocupações
children's book author
young adult writer
historical novelist
Relações
Schlumberger, Gustave (correspondent)
Dragoumi, Ion (lover)

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Penelope Delta was born in Alexandria, Egypt, to Emmanuel Benakis, a wealthy cotton merchant, and his wife Virginia Choremi. She had five siblings whose antics she later immortalized in her writing. When she was eight years old, the family went to live in Athens, Greece. In 1895, she married Stephanos Delta, a wealthy Greek businessman with whom she had three daughters. In 1906, they moved to Frankfurt, Germany for her husband's business. There she published her first novel, Gia tin Patrida (For the Sake of the Fatherland) in 1909. She became one of the earliest, and the most prolific, writers in Greek of children’s books and historical novels for teenage readers. In researching her first book, set in the Byzantine Empire, she began corresponding with historian Gustave Schlumberger, and their continued interaction provided material for her second novel, Ton Kairo tou Voulgaroktonou (In the Years of the Bulgar-Slayer). In 1916, she settled permanently in Athens, where her father had been elected Mayor. In 1925, she contracted polio, which paralyzed her for the rest of her life. Three of her novels based on her own family have been read by generations of children: Trellantonis (Crazy Antonis, 1932), Mangas (1935), and Ta Mystika tou Valtou (The Secrets of the Swamp, 1937). She took poison on April 27, 1941, devastated by Nazi Germany's invasion of her beloved Athens, and died several days later.

Membros

Críticas

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Associated Authors

Ruth Bobick Translator

Estatísticas

Obras
39
Membros
198
Popularidade
#110,929
Avaliação
½ 3.5
Críticas
10
ISBN
41
Línguas
4

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