Georges Simenon

Personal Info

Known For Writer

Gender Male

Birthday 1903-02-13

Deathday 1989-09-04 (86 years old)

Place of Birth Liège, Belgium

Also Known As Georges Joseph Christian Simenon, Жорж Жозеф Кристиан Сименон, Жорж Сименон, Georges Siménon

Georges Simenon

Biography

Georges Joseph Christian Simenon (13 February 1903 – 4 September 1989) was a Belgian writer. A prolific author who published nearly 500 novels and numerous short works, Simenon is best known as the creator of the fictional detective Jules Maigret. Simenon was born at 26 rue Léopold (now number 24) in Liège to Désiré Simenon and his wife Henriette Brüll. Désiré Simenon worked in an accounting office at an insurance company and had married Henriette in April 1902. Although Simenon was born on Friday 13 February 1903, superstition resulted in his birth being registered as having been on the 12th. This story of his birth is recounted at the beginning of his novel Pedigree. The Simenon family traces its origins back to Belgian Limburg. Simenon could trace his line back to peasants living in the area since as early as 1580. His mother had origins from Limburg, the Netherlands and Germany while his father was of Walloon origin. One of his mother's most notorious ancestors was Gabriel Brühl, a criminal who preyed on Limburg from the 1720s until he was hanged in 1743. Later, Simenon would use Brühl as one of his many pen names. In April 1905, two years after Simenon's birth, the family moved to 3 rue Pasteur (now 25 rue Georges Simenon) in Liège's Outremeuse neighbourhood. Simenon's brother Christian was born in September 1906 and eventually became their mother's favourite child, much to Simenon's chagrin. Later, in February 1911, the Simenons moved to 53 rue de la Loi, also in the Outremeuse. In this larger home, the Simenons were able to take in lodgers. Typical among them were apprentices and students of various nationalities, giving the young Simenon an important introduction to the wider world; this marked his novels, notably Pedigree and Le Locataire. At the age of three, Simenon learned to read at the Saint-Julienne nursery school. Then, between 1908 and 1914, he attended the Institut Saint-André. In September 1914, shortly after the beginning of the First World War, he began his studies at the Collège Saint-Louis, a Jesuit high school. In February 1917, the Simenon family moved to a former post office building in the Amercoeur neighbourhood. June 1919 saw another move, this time to the rue de l'Enseignement, again back in the Outremeuse neighbourhood. Using his father's heart condition as a pretext, Simenon decided to put an end to his studies in June 1918, not even taking the Collège Saint-Louis' year-end exams. He subsequently worked a number of very short-term odd jobs. In January 1919, the 15-year-old Simenon took a job at the Gazette de Liège, a newspaper edited by Joseph Demarteau. While Simenon's own beat only covered unimportant human interest stories, it afforded him an opportunity to explore the seamier side of the city, including politics, bars, and cheap hotels but also crime, police investigations and lectures on police technique by the criminologist Edmond Locard. Simenon's experience at the Gazette also taught him the art of quick editing. He wrote more than 150 articles under the pen name "G. Sim." He began submitting stories to Le Matin in the early 1920s. ... Source: Article "Georges Simenon" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Known For

Writer

Maigret

as Novel

Belle

as Novel

2022
Maigret

as Novel

2022
2016
Maigret

as Novel

2015
2015
2015
2014
The Blue Room

as Novel

2012
Madrid, 1987

as Dialogue

2009
2009
2007
2007
Die Katze

as Novel

2007
2006
La Californie

as Novel

2004
Red Lights

as Novel

2004
2002
The Blue Room

as Novel

1998
1997
Tangier Cop

as Novel

1994
1992
Betty

as Novel

1992
1992
Maigret

as Novel

1991
Maigret

as Book

1989
Monsieur Hire

as Novel

1988
Maigret

as Novel

1983
1983
Equator

as Novel

1982
1982
1982
1979
Der Mörder

as Novel

1973
1972
Youth on Fire

as Novel

1972
1971
1971
The Cat

as Novel

1971
1968
1967
Cop-Out

as Novel

1966
1964
1964
Maigret

as Novel

1963
1963
1962
Emile's Boat

as Novel

1961
The President

as Novel

1960
Maigret

as Novel

1960
Maigret

as Writer

1958
1958
The Stowaway

as Novel

1957
1957
1956
1954
1952
Forbidden Fruit

as Writer

1952
Full House

as Novel

1950
1950
1947
1947
Panic

as Novel

1947
Barrio

as Novel

1947
Last Refuge

as Novel

1944
1943
1943
Picpus

as Novel

1942
1933
A Man's Neck

as Novel

1932
1932
The Yellow Dog

as Screenplay

Creator

1992
Maigret

as Creator

1991
Maigret

as Creator

1974
1964
Maigret

as Creator

Actor

2000
Federico Fellini's Autobiography

as Self (archive footage)

1975
Apostrophes

as Self

1970
Treffpunkte

as Self

1956

Crew

1960
Maigret

as Creator