André Frédérique
French poet
André Frédérique (27 February 1915, Nanterre - 17 May 1957) was a French poet. He was a son of a police officer. He became a member of the Parisienne bohème (befriending people like Jean Carmet). His works, often full of black humour (which did not save him from suicide caused by his feeling of a metaphysical hopelessness) are similar to Henri Michaux.
Works
- Ana, Éd. Plaisir du prince, 1945
- Histoires blanches, Gallimard, 1946 (published with the help of Raymond Queneau)
- Aigremorts, Guy Lévis-Mano, 1947
- Poésie sournoise, Seghers, 1957
External links
- André Frédérique, in French
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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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