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Who wrote The Inn?

It was written by French Zola in 1877.

Zola (184 ~ 192) was a French writer. Born into an engineer's family, he lost his father at the age of 7 and lived in poverty. In 1857, she moved to Paris with her grandfather and worked as a docker after finishing middle school. In 1862, he joined Ashete Bookstore as a packer, and soon he was promoted to the director of advertising department with his outstanding poetic talent. During this period, a collection of short stories, The Story for Ninon (1864) and novels, The Confession of Claude (1865) and The Secret of Marseille (1867) were published. In the previous work, we can see the influence of romanticism. In the second work, the naturalistic creative method has already appeared. In the 196s, Zola put forward a naturalistic literary theory, thus becoming an "interrogator of human beings and their passions". During this period, Zola wrote novellas Delè s Lagan (1867) and Ma Delaine Fila (1868), both of which received a cold reception from the society. Beginning in 1868, he imitated Balzac's "Human Comedy" and made a grand plan to create a continuous large-scale work "Lugong-Markal Family". According to his expectation, this will be "the natural history and social history of a family in the second imperial era". After 25 years of hard writing, I finally finished this masterpiece including 2 novels. The works are influenced by naturalism theory to varying degrees, but in some of the masterpieces, realism tends to dominate. Such as Money (1891) and Inn (1877). Zola went on to write the novel trilogy "Three Cities", exposing the falsehood of religion and expounding the idea of improving society through science. In 1898, he devoted himself to the struggle for justice for Dreyfus, an aggrieved officer of Jewish descent, which led to persecution by the reactionary authorities. The Four Gospels, which I started writing when I was in exile in the United States, have only completed three books: Reproduction (1899), Labor (191) and Truth (191). The book reposes the author's social ideal. Zola's novel creation and naturalism theory deeply influenced French literature in the last decades of the 19th century.