Léo Malet

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Léo Malet (March 7, 1909March 3, 1996) was a French crime novelist.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Leo Malet was born in Montpellier. He had little formal education and began work as a cabaret singer at "La Vache Enragee" in Montmartre, Paris in 1925.

In the 1930s, he was closely aligned with the Surrealists, and was close friends with Andre Breton, Rene Magritte and Yves Tanguy amongst others. During this time, he published several volumes of poetry.

He died in Chatillon, the little town just south of Paris where he had lived for most of his life, the day before his 87th birthday.

[edit] Works

Though having dabbled in many genres, he is most famous for Nestor Burma, the anti-hero of Les Nouveaux Mystères de Paris. Burma, a cynical private detective, is an astute speaker of argot (French slang), an ex-Anarchist, a serial monogamist and an inveterate pipe smoker. Many of his adventures take place in a sole arrondissement of Paris though he never completed the full 20 arrondissements as he intended.

The comic strip artist Jacques Tardi adapted some of his books much to the author's approval claiming that he was the sole person to have visually understood his books.

[edit] Selected bibliography

  • 120, rue de la Gare (1943)
  • Le cinquième procédé (1948)
  • Le soleil naît derrière le Louvre (1954)
  • Des kilomètres de linceuls (1955)
  • Fièvre au Marais (1955)
  • La nuit de Saint-Germain-des-Prés (1955)
  • M'as-tu vu en cadavre (1956)
  • Brouillard au pont de Tolbiac (1956)
  • Casse-pipe à la Nation (1957)
  • Micmac moche au Boul' Mich' (1957)
  • Nestor Burma court la poupée (1971)
  • Poste restante (1983)

[edit] External links