Logos Multilingual Portal

Select Language



Honoré de Balzac (1799 - 1850)  

Honore de Balzac (he added the "de", he was not a noble), was born in 1800 and died in 1850 of caffeine poisoning.
Without the aid of a computer, or even a typewriter, he wrote over 100 novels, (The Human Comedy) between midnight and 6 AM during the last 20 years of his life, after trying to be a dramatist (and failing miserably). He would drink cup after cup of thick Turkish coffee and write furiously on sheets of blue paper by candlelight, always only a few steps ahead of his creditors (he was a shopaholic).
The tapestry of character and detail of environment he wove are unparalleled among the novelists of his time, or any other. It could be argued that he was the French Dickens. He, however, never married and left no progeny. His most famous works include Pere Goriot, Eugenie Grandet and Cousin Bette, from which a mediocre movie was recently made.



burokrasia ta un mekanismo gigantesko dirigí dor di personanan chikí
e durashon di e pashon ta proposhonal na e resistensia original di e muhé
kere tur kos ku nan ta bisabo di mundu - nada no ta demasiado horibel pa ta imposibel
leinan ta kasnan di araña dor di kua e muskanan grandi ta pasa i e chikitunan ta keda atrapá
no ta skandaloso ku algun bankero ta kaba den prison. Ta skandaloso ku tin ta kana rònt liber
soledat ta algu bunita, pero ta nesesario ku tin un persona ku ta bisa nos ku ta asina