Max Olivier-Lacamp
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.
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
gollark: They can obviously *emulate* it fine for human interaction when doing so leads to more paperclips.
gollark: They aren't really capable of self-reference.
gollark: Reward being defined as paperclips, because people kept putting that in somehow.
gollark: Mostly they just iterated over all possible computable theories which could possibly explain their reality, and used that to deduce the actions with the highest expected rewards.
gollark: We didn't really set that at all, I was just saying we had Turing-test-passing ones.
References
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.