(Redirected from Antoine de Saint Exupéry)'Antoine de Saint-Exupéry'
[1] (
pronounced ) (
June 29 1900 –
presumably July 31 1944) was a
French writer and
aviator. One of his most famous works is ''Le Petit Prince'' (''
The Little Prince''). He
disappeared on the night of July 31, 1944 while flying on a mission to collect data on German troop movements.
Biography
Antoine Jean-Baptiste Marie Roger de Saint-Exupéry was born in
Lyon into an old family of provincial nobility, the third of five children of Count Jean de Saint-Exupéry, an insurance broker who died when his famous son was three. His wife was named Marie de Fonscolombe.
After failing his final exams at a preparatory school, he entered the
École des Beaux-Arts to study
architecture. In 1921, he began his military service in the 2nd Regiment of Chasseurs, and was sent to
Strasbourg for training as a
pilot. The next year, he obtained his license and was offered a transfer to the air force. But his fiancée's family objected, so he settled in
Paris and took an office job. His engagement was ultimately broken off, however, and he worked at several jobs over the next few years without success. He later became engaged to the future novelist
Louise Leveque de Vilmorin in 1923.
By 1926, he was flying again. He became one of the pioneers of international postal flight in the days when aircraft had few instruments and pilots flew by instinct. Later he complained that those who flew the more advanced aircraft were more like accountants than pilots. He worked on the
Aéropostale between
Toulouse and
Dakar.
His first story ''L'Aviateur'' (''The Aviator'') was published in the
magazine ''Le Navire d'Argent''. In 1929, he published his first book, ''Courrier Sud'' (''Southern Mail''), and flew the
Casablanca/
Dakar route. He became the director of
Cape Juby airfield in
Río de Oro,
Western Sahara. In 1929, Saint-Exupéry moved to
South America, where he was appointed director of the
Aeroposta Argentina Company. This period of his life is briefly portrayed in the
IMAX film ''
Wings of Courage'', by French director
Jean-Jacques Annaud.

Historical marker on the home where Saint-Exupéry lived in Quebec.
In 1931, ''Vol de Nuit'' (''Night Flight''), which won the
Prix Femina, was published. That same year, at
Grasse, Saint-Exupéry married
Consuelo Suncín Sandoval, a widowed Salvadoran writer and artist. Theirs was a stormy marriage, as Saint-Exupéry traveled frequently and indulged in numerous affairs, most notably with a Frenchwoman, Hélène (Nelly) de Vogüé, who became Saint-Exupéry's literary executrix after his death and also wrote a biography about him using the pseudonym Pierre Chevrier.
While trying to break the record for a flight from
Paris to
Saigon, Saint-Exupéry and his mechanic crashed their
Caudron Simoun in the African desert. Their rescue by an Arab is told in ''Terre des Hommes'', (translated into English as ''
Wind, Sand and Stars''), which was published in 1939.
Saint-Exupéry kept writing and flying until the beginning of
World War II. During the war, he initially flew with the GR II/33 reconnaissance squadron of the
Armée de l'Air. After France's
armistice with Germany he traveled to the
United States, settling in
Asharoken, New York on
Long Island's north shore and then in
Quebec City for a time in 1942.
[2][3]
Disappearance in flight
After his time in
North America, Saint-Exupéry returned to Europe to fly with the
Free French and fight with the
Allies in a squadron based in the
Mediterranean. Then aged 44, he flew his last mission to collect data on German troop movements in the
Rhone River Valley. He took off from an airbase on
Corsica the night of July 31, 1944, and was never seen again. A lady reported having seen a plane crash around noon of August 1 near the
Bay of Carqueiranne. The body of a serviceman wearing a French uniform was found several days later and was buried in
Carqueiranne that September. Even though the German aerial combat records of
July 31,
1944 do not list the shooting down of an enemy aircraft in the Mediterranean on that day, there was a tacit (and romantic) assumption was that Saint-Exupéry had been shot down by a German fighter pilot.
Over 50 years later, in
1998, a fisherman found what was reported to be Saint-Exupéry's silver chain bracelet in the ocean to the east of the island of Riou, south of
Marseille. At first it was thought to be a
hoax, but it was later positively identified. It was engraved with the names of his wife and his publishers, Reynal & Hitchcock, and was hooked to a piece of fabric from his pilot's suit.
In 2000, a diver named Luc Vanrell found the crashed plane in the seabed off the coast of Marseille. It was extracted in October
2003. On
April 7,
2004, investigators from the French Underwater Archaeological Department confirmed that the twisted wreckage of a
Lockheed F-5 photo-reconnaissance aircraft (a version of the
P-38 Lightning fighter aircraft) was Saint-Exupéry's. The wreckage of Saint-Exupéry's F-5 did not show any traces of shooting or aerial combat. The informed assumption is that the crash was caused by a technical failure in the engine, in Saint-Exupéry's oxygen supply or possibly that he committed suicide.
Literary works
If not always
autobiographical, Saint-Exupéry's work is greatly inspired by his experiences as a pilot. No exception is ''
The Little Prince'', his most famous book, a
poetic illustrated tale in which a pilot stranded in the desert meets a young prince from a tiny
asteroid. In many ways ''The Little Prince'' is a
philosophical story, with emphasis on criticizing society and the follies of the adult world. Nevertheless, ''The Little Prince'' contains elements from several earlier stories.
★ ''L'Aviateur'' (1926)
★ ''Courrier Sud'' (1929) (translated into English as ''Southern Mail'')
★ ''Vol de Nuit'' (1931) (translated into English as ''
Night Flight'')
★ ''Terre des Hommes'' (1939) (translated into English as ''
Wind, Sand and Stars'')
★ ''Pilote de Guerre'' (1942) (translated into English as ''
Flight to Arras'')
★ ''Lettre à un Otage'' (1943) (translated into English as ''
Letter to a Hostage'')
★ ''Le Petit Prince'' (1943) (translated into English as ''
The Little Prince'')
★ ''Citadelle'' (1948) (translated into English as ''
The Wisdom of the Sands''), posthumous
Named after Saint-Exupéry
★
Villa Saint Exupéry- Youth Hostel and Student Residence in Nice, France
★
Saint-Exupéry International Airport in
Lyon
★ Asteroid
2578 Saint-Exupéry, named after Saint-Exupéry in 1975; see also
asteroid moon Petit-Prince
★ A French-language
lycée in
Santiago,
Chile.
★ A French-language lycée in
Madrid,
Spain
★ A French-language lycée in
Ouagadougou,
Burkina Faso
★ A French-language lycée in
Créteil,
France
★ A French-language lycée in
Saint-Raphaël,
France
★ A French-language lycée in
San Salvador,
El Salvador
★ A French-language lycée in
Rabat,
Morocco
★ A French-language collège in Andrésy,
France
★ A French-language primary school in Andrésy,
France
★ A French-language sport-study high school in
Montreal,
Canada
★ A mountain in
Patagonia,
Argentina
★
Cafe Saint-Ex- Aviation-themed restaurant in
Washington, DC,
U.S.
★ A limited edition pilots' wristwatch made by the
International Watch Company (IWC Schaffhausen)
Literary references
★ Saint-Exupéry is mentioned in
Tom Wolfe's ''
The Right Stuff'': "A saint in short, true to his name, flying up here at the right hand of God. The good Saint-Ex! And he was not the only one. He was merely the one who put it into words most beautifully and anointed himself before the altar of the right stuff."
★ His 1939 book ''Terre des hommes'' was the inspiration for the theme of
Expo 67 (in Montreal), which was also translated into English as "Man and His World".
Trivia
★ On
December 30,
1935 at 14:45 after a flight of 19 hours and 38 minutes Saint-Exupéry, along with his navigator, André Prévot crashed in the Libyan
Sahara desert en route to
Saigon. Their plane was a Caudron C-630 Simoun n°7042 (serial F-ANRY). Supposedly the crash site is located in the Wadi Natrum. They were attempting to fly from Paris to Saigon faster than anyone before them had for a prize of 150,000
francs. They both survived the accident, and were faced with the frightening prospect of rapid dehydration in the Sahara. Their maps were primitive and vague, and therefore useless. To compound the problem, the duo had no idea where they were. Grapes, an orange, and wine sustained the men for one day, and after that, they had nothing. Both of the men began seeing
mirages. Between the second and third day, the men were so dehydrated, they ceased to sweat. Finally, on the fourth day, a
Bedouin on a camel discovered them and administered native dehydration treatment, saving Saint-Exupéry and Prévot's lives. In ''The Little Prince'', when Saint-Exupéry talks about being marooned in the desert in a damaged aircraft, he is in fact making a reference to this experience in his life. Saint-Exupéry also talks about this ordeal in detail in his book ''Wind, Sand, and Stars''.
★ Consuelo de Saint-Exupéry wrote ''The Tale of the Rose'' a year or two after his disappearance, with the pain of loss still fresh in her heart, then put the manuscript away in a trunk. Two decades after her death in 1978, the manuscript finally came to light when José Martinez-Fructuoso, who was her heir and worked for her for many years, and his wife, Martine, discovered it in the trunk. Alan Vircondelet, author of a biography of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, edited it, improving her French and dividing it into chapters. Its publication in France in 2000, a full century after Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's birth on
June 29,
1900, became a national sensation. It has been translated into sixteen languages.
★ Saint-Exupéry is commemorated by a plaque in
the Panthéon.
★ Until the
euro was introduced in 2002, his image and his drawing of the Little Prince appeared on France's 50-franc note.
★ Saint-Exupéry and Consuelo were portrayed by
Bruno Ganz and
Miranda Richardson in the 1996 movie ''Saint-Ex: The Story Of The Storyteller''.
See also
★
The Bevin House
★
Aviators
★
Missing persons
★
List of people who have disappeared
Notes
1. According to French legal documents and his birth certificate, no hyphen is used in his name, thus written ''Antoine de Saint Exupéry'', not ''Saint-Exupéry'', although most people ignore it, even in France, including publishers. Thus the ''Armorial de l'ANF'', which lists the French nobility, mentions the ''Saint Exupéry (de)'' family, without any hyphen.
2. Saint-Exupery, , Stacy, Schiff, Owl Books, , ISBN 0805079130
3. The Country Where The Stones Fly
References
★
Stacy Schiff (1994). ''Saint-Exupéry: A Biography''. Pimlico.
★
"From The Murky Depths", by Benjamin Ivry in the ''
Wall Street Journal'',
April 15,
2004.
External links
★
Official website - French language
★
Another website about Antoine de Saint-Exupéry