Gustave Flaubert
Gustave Flaubert (December 12, 1821 - May 8, 1880) was a novelist born in Rouen, Seine-Maritime, in the Haute-Normandie Region of France. His novels are perhaps the most well-crafted of any of the French realists. (Compare Honoré de Balzac and Guy de Maupassant) He would occasionally spend an entire night writing to find that he had only composed a few sentences. This explains his exceedingly small output.
He can be said to have made cynicism into an art-form, as evinced by this observation of his from 1846:
To be stupid, and selfish, and to have good health are the three requirements for happiness; though if stupidity is lacking, the others are useless.
Among his friends were writers George Sand, Guy de Maupassant, Edmond de Goncourt and Jules de Goncourt[?].
Gustave Flaubert died in 1880 and was interred in the Rouen Cemetery, Rouen, France.
e-texts of some of Gustave Flaubert's works:
His greatest and most famous work is undoubtedly Madame Bovary (1857), which describes the disenchantment of the French bourgeois. Other noted works include Salammbo (1862), a historical novel set in ancient Carthage, L'Education Sentimentale (1869) La Tentation de Saint Antoine (1874), Trois Contes (1877), and Bouvard et Pécuchet (1881, posthumous).

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