Big names in literature parade, from Pierre Mac Orlan to Jean-Paul Dubois, including Kléber Haedens, Julien Gracq, Antoine Blondin, Denis Tillinac and many others.
With one thing in common: their attachment to this oval balloon to which they have devoted many chapters.
Co-author with the writer Benoit Jeantet of
Jeux de lines
(Éditions Privat), Richard Escot, journalist and author of about twenty books, deciphers for
Le Figaro
the "
link between these two universes which feed on each other. the other".
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The Taofifenua, the inexhaustible siblings of French rugby warriors
LE FIGARO.
- Having become a professional, does rugby still inspire writers?
Richard ESCOT.
- Sure.
The salaries, the watered-down press conferences, that doesn't prevent there being always characters.
The real problem today is in the multiplication of visions: the images circulate on the networks, the TV channels.
It kills the myth.
So the golden age is over?
There have been two golden ages.
The first where rugby became the king sport, in the 1920s.
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