- desk surface. The name
comes from "liseuse"
which is the
feminine form of "
liseur" in French. This is
often translated as "reader" but it is used normally...
-
French writer. He is best
known for the
novel The
Reader on the 6.27 (Le
liseur du 6h27, 2014),
translated into
English by Ros
Schwartz and
published by...
-
South Raynham, Norfolk,
England that was
founded in 1160 by
William de
Liseurs, and
dissolved between 1351 and 1374
under orders of
Henry VIII. The building...
- Marie-Noëlle
Pastureau Éditions L'Arpenteur [fr] 1997
Bernhard Schlink Le
Liseur German Bernard Lortholary Gallimard 1998
Sergio Ramírez Le Bal des masques...
- the silk to be used,
according to the
drawing provided by the customer),
liseurs (who
create the
perforated cards for the
Jacquard loom), magnanerelles...
-
Retrieved 16
September 2016. Ovaldé, Véronique (21
April 2016). "Seconde chance. Le
liseur de sang". Le
Monde (in French).
Retrieved 16
September 2016....
-
February 2019 (in French). D'Elbée, Jean. (27
October 1923). "Le
Carnet de
Liseur". La
Revue hebdomadaire, p. 504.
Retrieved 18
February 2019 (in French)...
- François -
Young Shoot 2015 (7th Awards) ZHOU Xiaoshen, for
translation of Le
Liseur du 6h 27,
written by Jean-Paul
Didierlaurent -
Literature XU Minglong, for...
-
Gilles Vincent, for Beso de la
muerte 2015: Jean-Paul Didierlaurent, for Le
liseur du 6h27 "Cezam Prix Littéraire
Inter CE".
Retrieved 2011-07-11. "Cezam Prix...