This is a list of women writers born in France, or whose writings are closely associated with France.

A

  • Geneviève Aclocque (1884–1967), historian
  • Juliette Adam (1836–1936), novelist, non-fiction writer, and magazine editor
  • Marie d'Agoult, pen name Daniel Stern (1805–1876), novelist, essayist, and history writer
  • Mathilde Alanic (1864–1948), novelist, short-story writer
  • Anne-Marie Albiach (1937–2012), poet and translator
  • Hortense Allart (1801–1879), feminist writer and essayist
  • Almucs de Castelnau (12th century), troubadour poet, writing in Occitan
  • Catherine d'Amboise (1475–1550), semi-autobiographical novelist and poet
  • Virginie Ancelot (1792–1875), painter and playwright
  • Alix André (1909–2000), romance novelist
  • Christine Angot (born 1959), novelist and playwright
  • Leili Anvar (born 1967), Persian-French writer and translator
  • Azalaïs d'Arbaud (1834–1917), Occitan-language writer
  • Sophie d'Arbouville (1810–1850), poet and short-story writer
  • Henri Ardel (1863–1938), writer, novelist
  • Catherine Arley, pen name of Pierrette Pernot (1922–2016), novelist and actress
  • Marie Célestine Amélie d'Armaillé (1830–1918), writer, biographer, and historian
  • Angélique Arnaud (1799–1884), novelist, essayist, and feminist
  • Madeleine de l'Aubespine (1546–1596), poet, literary patron, and one of the earliest female erotic poets
  • Gwenaëlle Aubry (born 1971), novelist, philosopher, and non-fiction writer
  • Colette Audry (1906–1990), novelist, screenwriter, and critic
  • Marie-Catherine d'Aulnoy (c. 1650–1705), writer of fairy tales and historical novels
  • Aurélia Aurita (born 1980), comic book author
  • Félicie d'Ayzac (1801–1881), poet, art historian
  • Azalais de Porcairagues (12th century), Occitan-language troubadour

B

  • Victoire Babois (1760–1839), writer of elegies
  • Marie-Claire Bancquart (1932–2019), poet, essayist, critic, and educator
  • Tristane Banon (born 1979), novelist, journalist, and television presenter
  • Arvède Barine (1840–1908), non-fiction writer, historian, and literary critic
  • Natalie Clifford Barney (1876–1972), American-born poet, playwright, and novelist, who wrote mainly in French
  • Lauren Bastide (born 1981), French journalist
  • Sophie Bawr (1773–1860), playwright, non-fiction writer
  • Fanny de Beauharnais (1737–1813), poet, novelist, playwright, and salonist
  • Simone de Beauvoir (1908–1986), novelist, essayist, existentialist philosopher, and feminist
  • Béatrix Beck (1914–2008), novelist, short-story writer, and poet of Belgian origin
  • Alice Becker-Ho (born 1941), poet and non-fiction writer
  • Claude de Bectoz (1490–1547), poet and letter writer
  • Géraldine Beigbeder, novelist, screen-writer
  • Maud de Belleroche (1922–2017), best-selling novelist, memoirist, and biographer
  • Loleh Bellon (1925–1999), actress and playwright
  • Yannick Bellon (1924–2019), film director and screenwriter
  • Juliette Benzoni (1920–2016), novelist
  • Catherine Bernard (1662–1712), poet, playwright, and novelist
  • Paulette Bernège (1896–1973), journalist, housework specialist, and prolific non-fiction writer
  • Emmanuèle Bernheim (1955–2017), novelist and screenwriter
  • Carmen Bernos de Gasztold (1919–1995), poet
  • Jean Bertheroy (1858–1927), writer
  • Louise Bertin (1805–1877), composer and poet
  • Mireille Best (1943–2005), novelist, often featuring lesbian characters
  • Nella Bielski (1930s – 2020), Ukrainian-born French novelist and actress
  • Gisèle Bienne (born 1946), novelist and writer for young adults
  • Raphaële Billetdoux (born 1951), novelist
  • Augustine-Malvina Blanchecotte (1830–1897), poet
  • Stella Blandy (1836–1925), writer and feminist
  • Janine Boissard (born 1932), writer
  • Lucie Boissonnas (1839–1877), author
  • Marie Bonaparte-Wyse (1831–1902), novelist, playwright
  • Itxaro Borda (born 1959), novelist, poet, translatro in Basque language
  • Louise de Bossigny (died 1700), fairy-tale writer
  • Laurence Bougault (1970–2018), poet, essayist, and travel writer
  • Claire Bouilhac (born 1970), bande dessinée illustrator, scriptwriter, colorist
  • Catherine de Bourbon (1559–1604), princess, poet, and letter writer
  • Louise Bourbonnaud (c. 1847–1915), writer, explorer, and philanthropist
  • Jeanne Bouvier (1865–1964), feminist and trade unionist
  • Sarah Bouyain (born 1968), novelist and film director
  • Nina Bouraoui (born 1967), novelist
  • Dounia Bouzar (born 1964), anthropologist and writer
  • Marie-Anne de Bovet (1855 – unknown date), novelist and journalist
  • Brada (1847–1938), novelist, biographer, memoirist, scriptwriter
  • Anne-Sophie Brasme (born 1984), novelist
  • Geneviève Brisac (born 1951), novelist, short-story writer, children's writer, critic, and screenwriter
  • Jacqueline-Aimée Brohon (1731–1778), novelist and essayist
  • Josette Bruce (1920–1996), Polish-born novelist
  • Fabienne Brugère (born in 1964), non-fiction writer
  • Andrée Brunin (1937–1993), poet, many of whose works have been set to music

C

  • Claude Cahun (1894–1954), poet, novelist, photograph, essayist, translator, and résistante
  • Nina de Callias (1843–1884), poet and salonnière
  • Amélie-Julie Candeille (1767–1834), composer, librettist, and playwright
  • Marcelle Capy (1891–1962), novelist, journalist, and pacifist
  • Marie Cardinal (1929–2001), novelist
  • Pauline Cassin Caro (1828/1834/1835–1901), novelist
  • Castelloza (13th century), troubadour poet
  • Claire Castillon (born 1975), novelist and playwright
  • Bernadette Cattanéo (1899–1963), newspaper editor, magazine co-founder, trade unionist, and communist activist
  • Anne-Marie Cazalis (1920–1988), journalist, poet, essayist, novelist, and actress
  • Charlotte-Rose de Caumont de La Force (1654–1724), novelist, poet, and memoirist
  • Rose Celli (1895–1982), novelist, children's author, playwright, translator, and poet
  • Rosine de Chabaud-Latour (1794–1860), translator
  • Françoise Chandernagor (born 1945), novelist and playwright
  • Véronique Chankowski (born 1971), French historian, non-fiction writer
  • Edmonde Charles-Roux (1920–2016), novelist, journalist, and photographer
  • Noëlle Châtelet (born 1944), essayist, novelist, short-story writer, and educator
  • Chantal Chawaf (born 1943), novelist and essayist
  • Madeleine Chapsal (1925–2024), novelist, poet, and critic
  • Charlotte Saumaise de Chazan (1619–1684), poet and lady in waiting
  • Élisabeth Sophie Chéron (1648–1711), painter, poet, and translator
  • Maryse Choisy (1903–1979), philosopher, novelist, and non-fiction writer
  • Hélène Cixous (born 1937), Algerian-born French novelist, poet, playwright, philosopher, critic, and feminist writer
  • Fanny Clar (1875–1944), French journalist and writer
  • Catherine Clément (born 1939), philosopher, novelist, feminist, and critic
  • Gabrielle de Coignard (1550–1586), religious poet
  • Louise Colet (1810–1876), poet, novelist, salonist
  • Colette (1873–1954), novelist, author of Gigi
  • Henriette de Coligny de La Suze (1618–1673), poet
  • Anne-Hyacinthe de Colleville (1761–1824), novelist and playwright
  • Danielle Collobert (1940–1978), poet, novelist, short-story writer, and journalist
  • Rose Combe (1883–1932), novelist
  • Sophie Ristaud Cottin (1770–1807), novelist, including several historical novels
  • Hélisenne de Crenne (1510–1552), novelist, epistolary writer, and translator
  • Pauline Marie Armande Craven (1808–1891), non-fiction writer

D

  • Jocelyne Dakhlia (born 1959), French historian, anthropologist, and academic
  • Gilberte H. Dallas, pen name of Gilberte Herschtel (1918–1960), poet, important member of the poètes maudits
  • Gerty Dambury (born 1957), poet, playwright, and theatre director from Guadeloupe
  • Marie Darrieussecq (born 1969), novelist
  • Countess Dash, pen name of Gabrielle Anne Cisterne de Courtiras, vicomtesse de Saint-Mars (1804–1872), novelist
  • Régine Deforges (1935–2014), novelist, short-story writer, essayist, and playwright
  • Alix Delaporte (born 1969), film director and screenwriter
  • Lucie Delarue-Mardrus (1874–1945), poet, novelist, journalist, and sculptor
  • Florence Delay (born 1941), novelist, essayist, playwright, translator, and actress
  • Jeanine Delpech (1905–1992), journalist, translator, and novelist
  • Sylvie Denis (born 1963), novelist, magazine editor, and translator
  • Maria Deraismes (1828–1894), playwright, essayist, and women's rights activist
  • Marceline Desbordes-Valmore (1786–1859), poet and novelist
  • Antoinette Des Houlières (1638–1694), poet
  • Marie-Anne Desmarest (1904–1973), novelist
  • Catherine Des Roches (1542–1587), Renaissance poet, daughter of Madelaine Des Roches
  • Madeleine Des Roches (c. 1520–1587), Renaissance poet, mother of Catherine Des Roches
  • Madeleine Desroseaux (1873–1939), Breton poet, novelist, playwright, and short-story writer
  • Jeanne Deroin (1805–1894), journalist and women's activist after the Revolution
  • Dominique Desanti (1920–2011), journalist, novelist, biographer, and educator
  • Agnès Desarthe (born 1966), children's writer and novelist
  • Marceline Desbordes-Valmore (1786–1859), poet
  • Maryline Desbiolles (born 1959), novelist
  • Anne Desclos (1907–1998), journalist, novelist, and translator, known under pen-names Pauline Réage and Dominique Aury
  • Madeleine Desroseaux (1873–1939), Breton-language poet and novelist
  • Régine Deforges (1935–2014) best-selling novelist, editor, director, and playwright, known for her erotic works
  • Antoinette Deshoulières (1638–1694), poet
  • Virginie Despentes (born 1969), novelist and autobiographer
  • Marie Desplechin (born 1959), novelist and children's writer
  • Jane Dieulafoy (1851–1916), archaeologist, novelist, and journalist
  • Clotilde Dissard (1873–1919), journalist and feminist
  • Louisa Emily Dobrée (fl. ca. 1877–1917), novelist, short-story writer, children's writer, non-fiction writer
  • Geneviève Dormann (1933–2015), journalist and novelist
  • Camille Drevet (1881–1969), editor-in-chief, La Voix des femmes
  • Pernette Du Guillet (c. 1520–1545), Renaissance poet
  • Caroline Dubois (born 1960), poet
  • Charlotte Dubreuil (born 1940), novelist, filmmaker, and screenwriter
  • Catherine Dufour (born 1966), novelist
  • Claire de Duras (1777–1828), novelist, author of Ourika
  • Marguerite Duras (1914–1996), novelist, playwright, and screenwriter of Hiroshima mon amour
  • Vanessa Duriès (1972–1993), novelist author of The Ties That Bind
  • Yvette Duval (1931–2006), Moroccan-born French historian, specializing in ancient North Africa

E

  • Françoise d'Eaubonne (1920–2005), feminist essayist and science-fiction novelist
  • Alexandrine des Écherolles (1779–1850), memoirist
  • Catherine Enjolet, French novelist and essayist
  • Annie Ernaux (born 1940), autobiographical novelist
  • Gisèle d'Estoc (1845–1894), writer, sculptor, and feminist
  • Claire Etcherelli (1934–2023), novelist

F

  • Geneviève Fauconnier (1886–1969), novelist
  • Madame de La Fayette (1634–1693), novelist, author of La Princesse de Clèves
  • Nathalie Ferlut (born 1968), comic book illustrator, scriptwriter, colorist
  • Juliette Figuier (1827–1879), playwright and novelist
  • Amanda Filipacchi (born 1967), French-born American novelist
  • Adelaide Filleul (1761–1836), novelist
  • Clara Filleul (1822–1878), painter and children's writer
  • Zénaïde Fleuriot (1829–1890), prolific novelist, writing for young women
  • Pierrette Fleutiaux (1941–2019), novelist and short-story writer
  • Brigitte Fontaine (born 1939), singer, novelist, playwright, and poet
  • Viviane Forrester (1925–2013), essayist, novelist, and critic
  • Jeanne-Justine Fouqueau de Pussy (1786–1863), author of children's and educational works
  • Jocelyne François (born 1933), lesbian novelist, poet, and diarist
  • Camille Froidevaux-Metterie (born 1968), non-fiction writer and novelist

G

  • Marie-Louise Gagneur (1832–1902), essayist, novelist, and feminist
  • Jeanne Galzy (1883–1977), novelist and biographer
  • Anne-Marie Garat (1946–2022), novelist
  • Delphine Gardey (born 1967), non-fiction writer
  • Anne F. Garréta (born 1962), novelist
  • Judith Gautier (1845–1917), poet, historical novelist, playwright, translator, and music critic
  • Anna Gavalda (born 1970), best-selling novelist, short-story writer, and works widely translated
  • Sophie Gay (1776–1852), novelist, playwright, and librettist
  • Stéphanie Félicité, comtesse de Genlis (1746–1830), novelist, playwright, and children's writer
  • Rosemonde Gérard (1871–1953), poet and playwright
  • Sylvie Germain (born 1954), novelist, essayist, and biographer
  • Amélie Gex (1835–1883), poet, who also wrote in Franco-Provençal
  • Azza Ghanmi (fl. 1970s), feminist editor
  • Delphine de Girardin (1804–1855), essayist, poet, and novelist
  • Anne Golon (1921–2017), novelist author of the Angélique series of historical novels
  • Mélanie Gouby (active since 2011), journalist
  • Olympe de Gouges (1748–1793), playwright and feminist writer, executed after the French Revolution
  • Marie de Gournay (1585–1645), novelist, essayist, and critic
  • Françoise de Graffigny (1695–1758), novelist and playwright
  • Évelyne Grandjean (born 1939), actress, playwright, and screenwriter
  • Virginie Greiner (born 1969), comic book scriptwriter
  • Henry Gréville, pen name of Alice Durand (1842–1902), widely translated novelist
  • Benoîte Groult (1920–2016), novelist and feminist
  • Claudine Guérin de Tencin (1682–1749), literary patron, novelist, and correspondent
  • Pernette du Guillet (c. 1520–1545), poet, most of whose works were intended to be set to music

H

  • Béatrice Hammer (born 1963), novelist, children's writer, and playwright
  • Myriam Harry (1869–1958), significant pre-1914 writer, daughter of Moses Shapira
  • Mireille Havet (1898–1932), poet, diarist, and novelist
  • Nathalie Henneberg (1910–1977), science-fiction novelist
  • Marie de Hennezel (born 1946), non-fiction writer
  • Catherine Hermary-Vieille (born 1943), novelist
  • Juliette Heuzey (1865–1952), novelist, biographer
  • Adèle Hommaire de Hell (1819–1883), explorer and travel writer
  • Violaine Huisman (born 1979), novelist, essayist, cultural journalist

J

  • Paula Jacques (born 1949), Egyptian-born French novelist, journalist, and radio host
  • Martine L. Jacquot (born 1955), French-born Canadian academic, novelist, poet, short-story writer, and journalist
  • Marie Jaffredo (born 1966), comics scriptwriter
  • Gaëlle Josse (born 1960), poet and novelist
  • Alice Jouenne (1873–1954), French educator, socialist activist, and writer

K

  • Fabienne Kanor (born 1970), journalist, novelist, and filmmaker
  • Maylis de Kerangal (born 1967), novelist
  • Kiyémis (born 1993), poet, Afro-feminist
  • Nadia Yala Kisukidi (born 1978), philosopher
  • Thérèse Kuoh-Moukouri (born 1938), Cameroon-born French novelist and essayist

L

  • Jean de La Brète (1858–1945), novelist
  • Anne-Marie Lacroix (1732–1802), French writer
  • Anne de La Roche-Guilhem (1644–1710), novelist, moved to England
  • Sylvie Lainé (born 1957), science-fiction novelist and short-story writer
  • Claire Lalouette, French Egyptologist
  • Jeanne Lapauze (1860–1920), born Jeanne Loiseau, poet and novelist, who used the pen name Daniel Lesueur
  • Oriane Lassus (born 1987), author, cartoonist, illustrator
  • Camille Laurens (born 1957), novelist
  • Linda Lê (born 1963), Vietnamese-born French novelist
  • Simone Le Bargy (1877–1985), actress, novelist, and memoirist
  • Martine Le Coz (born 1955), novelist, poet, and non-fiction writer
  • Violette Leduc (1907–1972), novelist and autobiographer
  • Marie Léopold-Lacour (1859–1942), feminist activist, writer, and storyteller
  • Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont (1711–1780), novelist and fairy-tale writer, author of Beauty and the Beast
  • Marie Léra (1864–1958), journalist, novelist, and translator
  • Michèle Lesbre (born 1939), writer and novelist
  • Grace Ly (born 1979), writer, podcaster, feminist

M

  • Lisa Mandel (born 1977), comics scriptwriter
  • Jeanne Marni (1854–1910), novelist, playwright, and essayist
  • Anne de Marquets (c. 1533–1588), religious poet, nun, and author of Les Sonets spirituels
  • Agnès Martin-Lugand (born 1979), novelist
  • Margaret Maruani (1954–2022), non-fiction writer
  • Sophie Massieu (born 1975), journalist
  • Renée Massip (1907–2002), novelist, journalist
  • Nicole-Claude Mathieu (1937–2014), sociologist specializing in gender studies
  • Claire-Marie Mazarelli de Saint-Chamond (1731–unknown), woman of letters, writer
  • Diane Mazloum (born 1980), French-Lebanese writer
  • Meavenn, pen name of Francine Rozec (1911–1992), Breton-language poet, novelist, and playwright
  • Natacha Michel (born 1941), political activist, novelist, and critic
  • Hélène Miard-Delacroix (born 1959), historian, Germanist, professor
  • Marijane Minaberri (1926–2017), children's author, poet, and short-story writer
  • Jane Misme (1865–1935), journalist and feminist
  • Ursule Molinaro (1916–2000), French-American novelist, playwright, and translator, who wrote in French and English
  • Kenizé Mourad (born 1939), journalist, non-fiction writer, and novelist

N

  • Claire Julie de Nanteuil (1834–1897), children's literature writer
  • Marguerite de Navarre (1492–1549), poet, playwright, and short-story writer, including the collection Heptaméron
  • Marie NDiaye (born 1967), novelist and playwright
  • Anaïs Nin (1903–1977), diarist, essayist, novelist, and short story writer
  • Anna de Noailles (1876–1933), highly-acclaimed novelist, poet, and autobiographer
  • Florence Noiville (born 1961), journalist, children's writer, novelist, and non-fiction writer

O

  • Véronique Olmi (born 1962), novelist, playwright, and short-story writer
  • Mona Ozouf (born 1931), historian and philosopher

P

  • Katherine Pancol (born 1954), novelist, journalist, and author of Les Yeux jaunes des crocodiles (The Yellow Eyes of Crocodiles)
  • Ève Paul-Margueritte (1885–1971), novelist
  • Lucie Paul-Margueritte (1886–1955), writer and translator
  • Madeleine Pelletier (1874–1939), feminist writer
  • Gabrielle Petit (feminist) (1860–1952), newspaper editor
  • Michelle Perrot (born 18 May 1928, Paris), historian, feminist, and grand officer of the legion of honor
  • Georges de Peyrebrune (1841–1917), prolific novelist, columnist, and feminist
  • Louise Pioger (1848–1920), anarchist, nursery rhymes
  • Anne Plichota (born 1968), children's writer and novelist
  • Maria Pognon (1844–1925), writer, journal editor, feminist, suffragist, and pacifist
  • Aliénor de Poitiers (15th century), writer on court etiquette
  • Renada-Laura Portet (1927–2021), poet, prose writer, non-fiction writer
  • Alice Poulleau (1885–1960), travel writer and geographer

R

  • Rachilde, pen name of Marguerite Vallette-Eymery (1860–1953), novelist and non-fiction writer, author of Monsieur Vénus
  • Geneviève-Françoise Randon de Malboissière (1746–1766), playwright, poet, and multi-lingual translator
  • Fanny Raoul (1771–1833), feminist writer, journalist, philosopher, and essayist
  • Pauline Réage, pen-name of Anne Desclos (1907–1998), who also used the pen-name Dominique Aury, novelist, editor, critic, and author of Story of O (Histoire d'O)
  • Marie Redonnet, pen name of Martine L'hospitalier (born 1948), poet, novelist, essayist, short-story writer, and playwright
  • Christine Renard (1929–1979), science-fiction novelist
  • Juliette Rennes (born 1976), sociologist and non-fiction writer
  • Gabrielle Réval (1869–1938), novelist and essayist
  • Sandrine Revel (born 1969), comics illustrator and author
  • Yasmina Reza (born 1959), playwright, novelist, actress, screenwriter, and author of God of Carnage
  • Nadine Ribault (1964–2021), novelist, short-story writer, and translator
  • Marie Jeanne Riccoboni (1714–1792), novelist and editor
  • Catherine Rihoit (born 1950), novelist and biographer
  • Christiane Rimbaud (1944–2023), historian
  • Blandine Rinkel (born 1991), novelist
  • Christine de Rivoyre (1921–2019), novelist and journalist
  • Antoinette Henriette Clémence Robert (1797–1872), novelist and playwright
  • Nina Roberts (born 1979), erotic novelist and actress
  • Tatiana de Rosnay (born 1961), journalist, novelist, and screenwriter
  • Marie-Anne de Roumier-Robert (1705–1771), early science-fiction novelist
  • Pascale Roze (born 1954), playwright and novelist, author of Sarah's Key (Elle s'appelait Sarah)
  • Léonie Rouzade (1839–1916), journalist, novelist, and feminist

S

  • Françoise Sagan (1935–2004), playwright, novelist, and screenwriter, author of Bonjour Tristesse
  • Vefa de Saint-Pierre (1872–1967), explorer, reporter, Breton-language poet, and children's writer
  • Lydie Salvayre (born 1948), novelist, widely translated
  • George Sand (1804–1876), novelist and playwright, author of Indiana
  • Anne de Seguier, 16th-century French poet and salon-holder
  • Nathalie Sarraute (1900–1999), Russian-born French novelist, who pioneered the nouveau roman
  • Albertine Sarrazin (1937–1967), French-Algerian novelist, essayist, and poet
  • Johanna Schipper (known as "Johanna"; born 1967), Taiwanese-born French comics artist and short-story writer
  • Ariane Schréder, novelist
  • Simone Schwarz-Bart (born 1938), Guadeloupean-French novelist, playwright, and non-fiction writer
  • Ann Scott (born 1965), novelist, short-story writer
  • Madeleine de Scudéry (1607–1701), novelist, works containing lengthy conversations
  • Countess of Ségur (1799–1874), Russian-born French novelist and children's writer
  • Eulalie de Senancour (1791–1876), journalist, novelist, and children's writer
  • Coline Serreau (born 1947), actress, film director, playwright, and essayist
  • Marie de Rabutin-Chantal, marquise de Sévigné (1626–1696), correspondent
  • Shan Sa, pen name of Yan Ni (born 1972), Chinese-born French poet, novelist, and painter, now writing in French
  • Valérie Simonin (1831–1919), novelist
  • Maboula Soumahoro (born 1976), scholar, Afro-feminist
  • Gabrielle Soumet (1814–1886), dramatist, poet, and feminist writer
  • Audrey Spiry (born 1983), animator, illustrator, and bande dessinée author
  • Germaine de Staël, also Madame de Staël (1766–1817), essayist, novelist, non-fiction writer, and salonnière
  • Louise Swanton Belloc (1796–1881), translator, essayist, novelist, non-fiction writer, children's book writer, and feminist

T

  • Tibors de Sarenom (12th century), troubadour poet, writing in Occitan
  • Marie-Louise Tenèze (1922–2016), ethnologist, folklorist
  • Françoise Thébaud (born 1952), historian and professor emeritus
  • Françoise Thom (born 1951), historian and Sovietologist
  • Chantal Thomas (born 1945), historian and novelist
  • Édith Thomas (1909–1970), novelist, historian, and journalist
  • Gilles Thomas, pen name of Éliane Taïeb (1929–1985), science-fiction novelist
  • Annette Tison (1942–2010), architect, children's writer, and co-creator of Barbapapa
  • Valerie Toranian (born 1962), journalist and editor of Elle
  • Nicole Tourneur (1950–2011), novelist and children's writer
  • Elsa Triolet (1896–1970), Russian-born French novelist, first women to win the Prix Goncourt, wrote in Russian and French
  • Nadine Trintignant (born 1934), film editor, writer, director, producer, and novelist
  • Flora Tristan (1803–1844), socialist writer and feminist

V

  • Valérie Valère (1961–1981), autobiographical novelist
  • Fred Vargas, pen name of Frédérique Audoin-Rouzeau (born 1957), crime fiction writer and historian
  • Delphine de Vigan (born 1966), novelist and author of No et moi, translated into 20 languages
  • Marie-Catherine de Villedieu (1640–1683), playwright, novelist, and short-story writer
  • Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve (c. 1695–1755), novelist, fairy-tale writer, and author of Belle et la Bête
  • Louise Lévêque de Vilmorin (1902–1969), novelist, poet, and journalist
  • Renée Vivien (1877–1909), British-born French-language poet, often writing autobiographical verse
  • Élisabeth Vonarburg (born 1947), science-fiction novelist

W

  • Chloé Wary (born 1995), comics writer
  • Simone Weil (1909–1943), philosopher and non-fiction writer
  • Anne Wiazemsky (1947–2017), German-born French novelist and actress
  • Joëlle Wintrebert (born 1949), science-fiction novelist and children's writer
  • Monique Wittig (1935–2003), novelist, playwright, and feminist writer
  • Cendrine Wolf (born 1969), children's writer, who collaborates with Anne Plichota

Y

  • Marguerite Yourcenar (1903–1987), novelist and essayist

Z

  • Léontine Zanta (1872–1942), novelist and feminist

References

See also

  • List of French-language authors
  • List of women writers

Famous French Female Writers

17 Most Famous French Writers Of All Time Dreams in Paris

Famous French Female Writers

Modern French Women Writers to Add to your Reading List Paris School

Famous French Female Writers