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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.



credì a tuto queo che i ve conta sul mondo, gnente xé massa bruto pa essare impossibie
ea burocrassia xé un mecanismo grando gestìo da nani
ea durata dea passion xé proporsionae aea resistensa inissiae dea femena
ea soitudine xe piacevoe, ma gavemo bisogno de uno che ne diga chea xe piacevoe
no xe scadaeoso che alcuni banchieri finisse in gaera, xe scandaeoso che i sia in libertà