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  Newsmakers   French author Michel Tournier dies

French author Michel Tournier dies

AFP
Published : Jan 20, 2016, 12:17 am IST
Updated : Jan 20, 2016, 12:17 am IST

Michel Tournier, a major French literary figure in the latter half of the 20th century, has died at the age of 91 in his home near Paris, his family and the local mayor said.

Michel Tournier
 Michel Tournier

Michel Tournier, a major French literary figure in the latter half of the 20th century, has died at the age of 91 in his home near Paris, his family and the local mayor said.

“He died at 7 pm (2330 IST),” surrounded by his loved ones, said his godson Laurent Feliculis on Monday, whom the author considered his adopted son. Tournier’s death was confirmed by the mayor of Choisel, a village of some 550 residents southwest of Paris where Tour-nier, a devout Catholic, had lived for the past 50 years. Tournier is considered one of France’s most influential authors of the second half of the 20th century. He won in 1970 the prestigious Prix Goncourt prize for The Erl-King, a haunting novel about a man who recruits children into the Nazi regime. Decades later, along with Arthur Miller, Gunter Grass, Gabriel Garcia Marquez and other major authors, Tournier contributed in 2004 to a collection of short stories named Telling Tales whose sales financed the fight against HIV/AIDS in South Africa. He also wrote children’s books, and loved to talk about his books at schools.

French President Francois Hollande in a statement paid homage to Tournier, describing him as a “great writer” of “immense talent”. Felic-ulis said his godfather’s health had deteriorated badly in recent months.

“In recent times, he just didn’t want to fight any more, it was old age,” he said. He was visited four times by President François Mitterrand during his presidency and despite his love of quiet village life in Choisel, he still made noisy media appearances. In 1989 he described abortionists as “the sons and grandsons of the monsters of Auschwitz” and said they should suffer the death penalty. Alain Seigneur, the mayor of Choisel, said the author wanted to be laid to rest in the village he had lived in since 1957.

Location: France, Île-de-France, Paris