Max Olivier-Lacamp
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Max Olivier-Lacamp (March 2, 1914 Le Havre – June 17, 1983 Meudon) is a French journalist and writer, winner of the Prix Renaudot in 1969, and Albert Londres Prize in 1958.
Biography
Max Olivier, also known as Max-Olivier Lacamp, was a reporter for Le Figaro and reported on the Partition of India, in 1947. His book, Between the two Asias, is devoted to the difference between Asian Indian and Far East.[1]
Family
He lived in Korea, and married a Korean. He is the father of the writer Ysabelle Lacamp.
Works
- Les Feux de la colère, Bernard Grasset, 1969, Prix Renaudot.
- Le Kief, B. Grasset, 1974, ISBN 978-2-246-00055-6
- Le matin calme : Corée d'hier et d'aujourd'hui , Stock, 1977, ISBN 978-2-234-00668-3
- Les chemins de Montvézy, Grasset, 1981, ISBN 978-2-246-27291-5
References
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External links
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- ↑ Télé 7 Jours, #554, 5 décembre 1970, pages 80 et 81, à l'occasion de la diffusion du film Kim (1951) de Victor Saville le 11 décembre 1970 dans le cadre des Dossiers de l'écran ayant pour thème l'Inde.