Triolet, Elsa (1896-1970). Of Russian origin (she was born Elsa Kagan and was the sister of Mayakovsky's lover Lili Brik), Triolet owes her reputation to her role in the Resistance: together with her partner Louis Aragon, she was a founding member of the Comité National des Écrivains and worked on the clandestine Les Lettres françaises. Her fiction from the Occupation period constitutes her most powerful and accomplished work: two novels, Mille regrets (1942) and Le Cheval blanc (1943), and the collection of short stories which won the 1945 Prix Goncourt, Le Premier Accroc coûte deux cents francs (1945). Her post-war fiction was essentially Socialist Realist, but retained an element of fantasy and often returned to the preoccupation with the role of women in the Resistance.
[Nicholas Hewitt]




