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Conrad Detrez (1 April 1937, in Roclenge-sur-Geer – 11 February 1985, in Paris) was a Belgian (from 1982 on French) journalist, diplomat and novelist.

Detrez, the year before his death
Detrez, the year before his death

Biography


Conrad Detrez grew up in a small village in the Belgian countryside. In 1962 he traveled to Brazil as a lay missionary. He first stayed in Volta Redonda and from 1963 in Rio de Janeiro. He was a university teacher while at the same time working in the favelas. He discovered his homosexuality and gradually became involved in the resistance to the military dictatorship that was installed in 1964 in Brazil.

After being arrested and expelled from Rio de Janeiro in 1967, Detrez stayed some months in Paris, participating in the revolt of May 68. He returned to São Paulo where he became a journalist. In 1969 he secretly met and interviewed Brazilian guerrilla leader Carlos Marighella.

In the 1970s Detrez stayed in Algeria (as a teacher) and in Lisbon (as a radio journalist) after the Portuguese Carnation Revolution.

Before his writing career Detrez translated books by the Brazilian writers Jorge Amado and Antonio Callado. In 1978 he won the Prix Renaudot for his autobiographical novel L'Herbe à brûler.

In 1982 Detrez became a diplomat for the French government in Nicaragua. He died of AIDS.


Critical reception


Poet James Kirkup found Le dragueur de Dieu "beautifully written in a fluent, lucid and visionary manner" and praised the mixture of religious sensuality and intellectual mysticism. "Writers in other countries seem able to reconcile sexual and religious themes in their works in a way that is rarely found in English or American authors."[1]

Lydia Davis translated two of Detrez's novels into English. A Weed for Burning was labeled in the Los Angeles Times an "extremely ambitious novel".[2] "Detrez is still an unfinished writer", claimed Time.[3] "But he has a sense of the appropriate image and the right valedictory tone." The Village Voice praised his "effectiveness as a storyteller".[4]

Chilean historian Rafael Pedemonte calls Detrez "a thrilling figure, unfairly forgotten after his premature death".[5]


Works



References


  1. The Times Literary Supplement, 4 September 1981.
  2. Los Angeles Times, 4 November 1984.
  3. Time, 17 September 1984.
  4. The Village Voice, 17 July 1984.
  5. "Interview with Rafael Pedemonte, author of 'The Meeting of Revolutionary Roads: Chilean-Cuban Interactions, 1959–1970'".

На других языках


- [en] Conrad Detrez

[fr] Conrad Detrez

Conrad Detrez, né le 1er avril 1937 à Roclenge-sur-Geer, Belgique et mort le 12 février 1985 à Paris, France, est un écrivain, à la fois romancier et poète belge d’expression française et un militant wallon[1] naturalisé français en 1982.



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