Yes, I have another book about writer's houses (don't worry last one)! This is one that is in my collection, and it includes authors from all over, though honestly I am not familiar with as many of them as I was with the American authors. So, any guesses of which room belongs to which author?
Edited: You guys are good sports! Good guesses! I think I made the hints a little too hard on some of them, however you guys picked out the ones I expected you to very easily! By the way thse are from the book: Writers' Houses by Francesca Premoli-Droulers. Without further ado...here are the answers....
I have never read this author's work (photo above). This author was born in Brussels. The author's mother died of complications from childbirth ten days after the author was born. The author read Racine, and Aristophanes by the age of eight (!!), and the author's father taught them latin at ten and Greek at twelve! Love the elephant by the way. Marguerite Yourcenar
This author was born in 1895. I have never read this author's work (again), but I do have this book: In "?", published in 1951 , the author "plotted the long journey of Angelo, who runs across the roofs of Manosque, fleeing the ignorant malice of people and the epidemic of cholera". Jean Giono
This author was a poet and writer. This author's best known line: "Do not go gentle into that good night". Very famous. Dylan Thomas
I have a particular interest in this author right now. This author was born into a large family, members of which were also literary and artistic in their own right. This author is considered one of the foremost modernist literary figures of the 20th century. Easy, eh. Virginia Woolf
This author was a sailor and a writer! I read that this author's fictionalized account of their childhood influenced Proust! Very exotic diggs! This author wrote under a pen name. Pierre Loti
Don't you love this library? This author was not only a poet and novelist, but also a gardener. This author was an aristocrat and created famous gardens in Sissinghurst, Kent. Vita Sackville-West
While this author was not born in Africa, they are famous for having lived there and written about it. I have not read this author's work, but I want to. This author's "'tales' take not only the traditional style of storytelling, but also (most of them) actually take place against the periodical background of 19th century or even before." Karen Blixen (Isak Dinesen)
This author won the Nobel Prize in 1920. If you happen to belong to the 19th Century Literature Yahoo group, you might be reading one this author's books soon. This atuhor's work is said to have presaged that of Franz Kafka. Knut Hamsun
This author was not only a famous poet, novelist, dramatist, but also a designer, and boxing manager (hmm--didn't know that before) as well as a filmmaker. This author was "an exponent of surrealism". Jean Cocteau
Good luck!