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・ Charles E. Dagit, Jr.
・ Charles E. Daniel
・ Charles E. Davies House
・ Charles E. DeLong
・ Charles Du Bos
・ Charles Du Cane
・ Charles du Dros
・ Charles du Fresne, sieur du Cange
・ Charles du Houx de Vioménil
・ Charles du Plessis d'Argentré
・ Charles Dubin
・ Charles Dubois
・ Charles Dubois (treasurer)
・ Charles Ducasse
・ Charles Duccilli
Charles Duchaussois
・ Charles Duclerc
・ Charles Duder
・ Charles Dudley
・ Charles Dudley (actor, make-up artist)
・ Charles Dudley (basketball)
・ Charles Dudley Daly
・ Charles Dudley Rhodes
・ Charles Dudley Warner
・ Charles Duff
・ Charles Duff (cricketer)
・ Charles Dugan House
・ Charles Dugua
・ Charles Duguid
・ Charles Duhigg


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Charles Duchaussois : ウィキペディア英語版
Charles Duchaussois

Charles Duchaussois was a French writer who was born 27 January 1940 and who died 27 February 1991. Duchaussois is most noted for his autobiographical novel ''Flash ou le Grand Voyage''.
== Biography ==

Born 27 January 1940 to diplomats, he was hit in the eye by shrapnel during a morning air raid when he was 4 months and 8 days old. This left him blind in one eye, a detail often evoked in his novels. In his 20s, he decided to leave for the south of France after getting fed up with the Île-de-France. After various thefts, frauds, and multiple trips to prison, he left for Lebanon to meet a friend. This is where "Flash ou le grand voyage" starts.
It was 1969 at the zenith of the hippie movement, from Marseille to Beirut, from Istanbul to Baghdad, taking long detours in India, by boat, on foot, in car, Charles bit by bit got closer to Kathmandu, the height of drugs and hippies. His trip began by accident in Lebanon, with arms and hashish tradings. His destination was Kathmandu. His trip was groundbreaking from a geographical perspective but also from the sheer number of drugs he discovered. He went deep into drug addiction, offering the reader not only a look at his exploits but also his challenges. He was medically repatriated to Paris on 10 January 1970, after six months of progressive and near total descent into hell. The end of his trip touches insanity, Charles escaping death several times at the last minute. Upon his return, he recorded the tale of his adventure on 18 magnetic tapes and sent it to Fayard publishing house in December 1970., Insanity, death & excess, it was the decade. This psychedelic novel gives us a clear and sometimes crazy insider's look at hippie wave of the 60s.
After "Flash" : Until November 1970, he struggles with drug addiction, helped by Jocelyne, a French woman he met at Kathmandu. Charles and Jocelyne don't escape from the world of drugs, working odd jobs, raiding Parisian pharmacies, going insane and then to detox. At the beginning of 1971, they moved to Switzerland, to la Chaux de Fonds. 3 November 1971, their son Krishna-Romain was born. The name was in honor of a servant Charles had in Kathmandu and a friend of Charles who settled in Kuwait At the beginning of 1972, Charles wants to travel again (in South America) but Jocelyne wants a stable life to raise Krishna-Romain.
Charles left to go live in Paris. He remarried in 1974 to Christiane, and had a baby girl: V. They separated in 1977. At the end of 1978, tragedy struck, Charles was imprisoned for homicide. Divorced in 1983, he met Fernanda and remarried for the third time in the Paris region. They divorced in 1986.
Charles Duchaussois died of lung cancer 27 February 1991 at Saint-Michel de Paris hospital.
Monsieur S., funeral director recognized him and let him be entombed in the Valenton intermunicipal cemetery. He rests in an unmarked grave with two brothers at his side.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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