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Arsene Lupin in prison
Contributor(s): LeBlanc, Maurice (Author)
ISBN: 1501082817     ISBN-13: 9781501082818
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
OUR PRICE:   $9.73  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: September 2014
* Not available - Not in print at this time *
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Crime
Physical Information: 0.09" H x 5.06" W x 7.81" (0.12 lbs) 44 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
"Arsene Lupin in prison" is a short story by Maurice Leblanc. Maurice Marie mile Leblanc (11 November 1864 - 6 November 1941) was a French novelist and writer of short stories, known primarily as the creator of the fictional gentleman thief and detective Ars ne Lupin, often described as a French counterpart to Arthur Conan Doyle's creation Sherlock Holmes. Leblanc was born in Rouen, Normandy, where he was educated at the Lyc e Pierre Corneille. After studying in several countries and dropping out of law school, he settled in Paris and began to write fiction, both short crime stories and longer novels; his novels, heavily influenced by writers like Gustave Flaubert and Guy de Maupassant, were critically admired but met with little commercial success. Leblanc was largely considered little more than a writer of short stories for various French periodicals when the first Ars ne Lupin story appeared in a series of short stories serialized in the magazine Je Sais Tout, starting in No. 6, dated 15 July 1905. Clearly created at editorial request under the influence of, and in reaction to, the wildly successful Sherlock Holmes stories, the roguish and glamorous Lupin was a surprise success and Leblanc's fame and fortune beckoned. In total, Leblanc went on to write twenty-one Lupin novels or collections of short stories. The character of Lupin might have been based by Leblanc on French anarchist Marius Jacob, whose trial made headlines in March 1905; it is also possible that Leblanc had also read Octave Mirbeau's Les 21 jours d'un neurasth nique (1901), which features a gentleman thief named Arthur Lebeau, and seen Mirbeau's comedy Scrupules (1902), whose main character is a gentleman thief. It was not influenced by E. W. Hornung's gentleman thief, A.J. Raffles, created in 1899, whom Leblanc had not read.