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Luc Dietrich

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Name
  
Luc Dietrich

Nominations
  
Prix Goncourt

Books
  
Le Bonheur des tristes

Died
  
August 12, 1944

Role
  
Writer


Luc Dietrich Luc Dietrich amp Lanza del Vasto Montredon chez la

Luc Dietrich, Charles Bukowski, et les démons dans le Scriptorium


Luc Dietrich (17 March 1913, Dijon – 12 August 1944) was a French writer.

Contents

Luc Dietrich wwwespritsnomadescomsitelitteraturedietrichima

Dietrich was born in Dijon. His father died when he was very young, and his mother was ill and addicted to drugs. She was frequently incapable of taking care of her son; several times he was sent asylums and similar establishments. Shortly after Dietrich's release from one at the age of 18, his mother died.

Luc Dietrich Luc Dietrich L39apprentissage de la ville 1942

In 1932 Dietrich met philosopher and poet Lanza del Vasto at the Parc Monceau in Paris. The first thing del Vasto said to Dietrich was "Are you as good as this bread?" The two became inseparable friends for the rest of Dietrich's short life. Lanza helped and mentored Dietrich in writing, although he always refused to be credited as a co-author. Another of Dietrich's famous friends was poet René Daumal. After becoming lightly wounded during a bombardment in 1944, Dietrich developed hemiplegia and then gangrene, and died the same year.

He is best known today for his semi-autobiographical novel, Le Bonheur des tristes ("The Happiness of Sad People").

Works

  • Huttes à la lisière, 1930
  • The Happiness of Sad People (Le Bonheur des tristes), 1935
  • Earth (Terre), 1936
  • Apprenticeship of the City (L’Apprentissage de la ville), 1942
  • Talk of Friendship (Le Dialogue de l’Amitié), with Lanza del Vasto, 1942
  • L'Injuste Grandeur, 1943
  • Emblèmes végétaux, 1993
  • Demain, c’est le possible, 1996
  • Poésies, 1996
  • L'École des conquérants, 1997
  • References

    Luc Dietrich Wikipedia