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  1. Irène Némirovsky (French: [iʁɛn nemiʁɔfski]; 11 February 1903 – 17 August 1942) was a novelist of Ukrainian Jewish origin who was born in Kiev, then in the Russian Empire. She lived more than half her life in France and wrote in French, but was denied French nationality.

  2. Irène Némirovsky (en russe : Ирина Леонидовна Немировская, Irina Leonidovna Nemirovskaïa) est une romancière russe d'expression française, née à Kiev le 11 février 1903 (24 février dans le calendrier grégorien) et morte le 17 août 1942 à Auschwitz.

  3. Irène Némirovsky was a French novelist of Ukrainian-Jewish origin who wrote fourteen novels in thirteen years before her death in Auschwitz in 1942. Némirovsky’s sentiment towards Jews and conversion to Roman Catholicism in 1939 has drawn criticism in recent years.

  4. Suite française (French pronunciation: [sɥit fʁɑ̃sɛːz]; 'French Suite') is the title of a planned sequence of five novels by Irène Némirovsky, a French writer of Ukrainian-Jewish origin.

  5. Growing Up With Irène Némirovsky. On Dec. 17, 1941, a year and a half into the Nazi occupation of France, an “Aryan” French governess named Julie Dumot, living in the quiet provincial ...

  6. Trapped in Moscow by the Russian Revolution, she and her family fled first to a village in Finland, and eventually to France, where she attended the Sorbonne. Irène Némirovsky achieved early success as a writer: her first novel, David Golder, published when she was twenty-six, was a sensation.

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  8. Sep 1, 2004 · Irène Némirovsky’s Suite Francaise is different. Her life – and her death – haunt every single page, making an entirely objective literary critique (if such a thing even exists) next to impossible. Némirovsky was a successful writer living in Paris when the Germans invaded France in 1940.