Sophie Ristaud Cottin


Sophie Cottin was a French writer whose novels were popular in the 19th century, and were translated into several different languages.

Biography

Marie Sophie Ristaud was born in March 1770 at Tonneins. She was not yet twenty when she married her first husband, Jean-Paul-Marie Cottin, a banker. She wrote several romantic and historical novels including Elizabeth; or, the Exiles of Siberia, a "wildly romantic but irreproachably moral tale", according to Nuttall's Encyclopaedia. She also published Claire d'Albe, Malvina, Amélie de Mansfield, Mathilde, set in the crusades, and a prose-poem, La Prise de Jéricho. Her writing became more important to her after her first husband died when she was in her early twenties. She went to live with a cousin and her three children at Champlan but died at the age of 37 in Paris on 25 August 1807.

List of works