Louis Nucéra Explained

Birth Date:18 July 1928
Occupation:Writer

Louis Nucéra (17 July 1928 – 9 August 2000) was an award-winning 20th-century French writer. He published his first novel L'obstiné in 1970.

Biography

As well as being a writer, Nucéra was a cyclist (he rode the same circuit as the 1949 Tour de France), a bank clerk, a journalist, a press secretary in a record company, and a literary director at JC Lattès. He recalls his childhood in Nice in Avenue des Diables bleus. In 1991 he wrote Le ruban rouge which chronicles the life of Italian immigrants. In Mes ports d’attache he evokes his friendships with Cioran, Kessel, Picasso, Cocteau, Hardellet, Brassens and Moretti.

Nucéra died on August 9, 2000, in the industrial zone of Carros when he was hit by a car while bike riding.

Awards

Works

Further reading

1999: Nice, from Colette to Louis Nucera [fr:Nice, de Colette à Louis Nucera], Éditions du Collège Fabre, Nice, with Nicole Vaillant.2006: La Mémoire d'un siècle (Conférences), Éditions Vaillant.

External links