Simone Téry (January 28, 1897 – December 12, 1967) was a French journalist who wrote several books and was a war correspondent.
After two years, a truce was signed between the Irish rebel leaders and the British government in July 1921.
She interviewed leaders and politicians across the country including members of Sinn Féin; Éamon de Valera, and Arthur Griffith.
Notes sur la litterature irlandaise Contemporaine (1925) also defended the cause of Irish independence.
[1][2] He was editor and founder of the Irish Statesman, when Téry served as Paris correspondent for the paper.
She wrote a book about Danielle Casanova, a militant communist who was a member of the French Resistance.