Roger Milliot
French writer
Roger Milliot (1927, Le Creusot – 1968) was a French poet and painter. He served as a soldier in Indochina and as such had a pension. His health problems prevented him from becoming an ornamentalist. Like his idol René Char, he preferred provincial life to that of Paris and lived in Montauban, where there is now a museum of his paintings, mostly portraits of women. His depression and feelings of frustration led him to suicide by drowning in the Seine river. His poems were published posthumously.
Works
- QUI?, 1968
- QUI?, 1969 – definitive edition, illustrated and with a portrait
References
- Poètes maudits d'aujourd'hui: 1946-1970, Roger Milliot by Félix Castan, p. 124
- Ivan Slavík, Rozklenout srázné, Olomouc, 1993, p. 86
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- Charles Baudelaire
- Arthur Rimbaud
- Paul Verlaine
- Les Fleurs du mal (Baudelaire)
- Illuminations (Rimbaud)
- Les Poètes maudits (Verlaine)
- Les Chants de Maldoror (Lautréamont)
d'aujourd'hui: 1946–1970
- Antonin Artaud
- Gilberte H. Dallas
- Jean-Pierre Duprey
- André Frédérique
- Roger Milliot
- Gérald Neveu
- Jacques Prevel
- André de Richaud
- Roger-Arnould Rivière
- Armand Robin
- Jean-Philippe Salabreuil
- Ilarie Voronca
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