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Alain Bosquet
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Name
Alain Bosquet
Role
Poet
Died
March 8, 1998, Paris, France
Books
Sonnets pour une fin de siècle, Un jour apres la vie
Awards
Grand Prix du roman de l'Academie francaise, Prix Goncourt de la Poesie
Similar People
Liliane Wouters, Herman Melville, James Laughlin, Andrei Voznesensky, Alain Grandbois
Ex g ses sjp alain bosquet
Alain Bosquet, born Anatoliy Bisk (Russian: Анато́лий Биск) (March 28, 1919, Odessa – 8 March 1998, Paris), was a French poet.
In 1925, his family moved to Brussels and he studied at the Université Libre de Bruxelles, then at the Sorbonne.
Mobilized in 1940, he fought in the Belgian army, then in the French army. In 1942, he fled with his family to Manhattan, where he helped edit the Free French magazine Voix de France. He enlisted in the U.S. Army during World War II, and received U.S. Citizenship. He met his wife, Norma Caplan, in Berlin. He was Special Adviser to the mission on behalf of the Allied Control Council Quadripartite Council of Berlin from 1945 to 1951.
In 1947, with Alexander Koval and Edouard Roditi founded the German-language literary review, Das Lot ("The Sounding Line"), six numbers from October, 1947 until Juni, 1952, with publisher Karl Heinz Henssel in Berlin.