Jean Giono(1895-1970)
- Writer
- Actor
- Director
French novelist Jean Giono was born in a small town in the French Alps
in 1895. His grandfather was an officer in the French army who took
part in the brutal French campaign against the Spanish guerrillas, then
turned against his government, was tried and sentenced to death and
escaped by hiding in the mountains, where Jean was later born. Giono
dropped out of school at 16 years of age; his father, who had married
and fathered children late in his life, was old and ill, and Jean had
to work to support the family. He joined the army in 1914 at the
outbreak of World War I, fought at the battle of Verdun--one of the
bloodiest in history--and left the army at war's end. He began writing
soon afterwards, and in 1921 his poem "Sous le Pied Chaud du Soleil"
was published in a Marseilles journal, and in 1924 it was published as
a book. Four years later his short story "Champs" was published, and
over the next few years several of his novels were published (his 1931
novel "Lovers Are Never Losers" won the Prix Brentano prize). His
experiences during World War I apparently turned him into a pacifist,
and in 1934 he joined a French political organization to fight what he
saw as the march towards war, and especially fascism, in France; in
1939, after France had declared war on Germany, he was arrested by the
French government for urging the populace to oppose the war and refuse
to fight in it. He died in his native Manosque, France, in 1970.