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Jean de La Hire : ウィキペディア英語版
Jean de La Hire

Jean de La Hire (pseudonym of the Comte Adolphe d'Espie) was a prolific French author of numerous popular adventure, science fiction and romance novels.
Adolphe d'Espie was born on 28 January 1878 in Banyuls-sur-Mer, Pyrénées-Orientales. He was a scion of an old French noble family dating back the reign of Saint Louis, which gave the ancient city of Toulouse a Capitoul during the Middle Age. He was a soldier during World War I. He died during 1956 at Nice as a result of a congestion of the lungs due to chronic pulmonary problems from having been gassed during that war.
At the age of twenty, the only son of the last Comte d'Espie chose the pseudonym "Jean de la Hire", clearly indicating the admiration he dedicated to La Hire, legendary comrade of Joan of Arc, claiming to be his descendant. As numerous young ambitious ''provinciaux'' eagerly wanting literary fame and fortune, he migrated to Paris with the support of his uncle, the then already famous sculptor Aristide Maillol. But his debuts were not very successful and, after he was not awarded the Prix Goncourt, he abandoned classic literature and decided to author more popular novels of the ''roman populaire'' genre.
During his lifetime, he authored more than 300 novels and short-stories, some published with more than 100,000 issues, the most popular being his super-science works - and among them the ''Nyctalope'' series. Most of them - mainly in the dime novels style: detective novels, adventures, romances, western stories, etc. - were published as series in popular newspapers, magazines and quarterlies.
==Overview==
Jean de La Hire is remembered nowadays mainly for having created one of the first literary superheroes of so-called pulp fiction: The Nyctalope. The Nyctalope appeared first in ''L'Homme Qui Peut Vivre dans l'Eau'' (The Man Who Could Live Underwater) (1908) and continued to be published until the mid-1950s, when its books were reprinted by La Hire's son-in-law as rewritten editions.
The Nyctalope's adventures were of the science fiction style:
In ''L'Homme Qui Peut Vivre dans l'Eau'', mad scientist Oxus grafted a shark’s gills onto a man, enabling him to breathe underwater. In ''Le Mystère des XV'' (The Mystery Of The XV) (1911), Oxus tried to conquer the planet Mars. In ''Lucifer'' (1920), the villainous Glo von Warteck tried to command the world using “Omega Rays” to enslave mankind. In ''Le Roi de la Nuit'' (King Of The Night ) (1923), the Nyctalope flew to Rhea, an unknown satellite of Earth.
La Hire was also the author of ''La Roue Fulgurante'' (The Fiery Wheel) (1908), a classic "space opera" in which five Earthmen are abducted in the eponymous “fiery wheel” (a flying saucer) and taken to Mercury by aliens who look like columns of light.
La Hire's other works included ''Le Corsaire Sous-Marin'' (The Underwater Corsair) (1912–13), a 79-issue feuilleton derivative of Jules Verne, ''Joe Rollon, l'Autre Homme Invisible'' (Joe Rollon, The Other Invisible Man) (1919), a variation on H.G. Wells' story and ''Les Grandes Aventures d'un Boy Scout'' (The Great Adventures Of A Boy-Scout) (30 issues, 1926), a serial that features the adventures of boy scout Franc-Hardi in underground realms, other planets, etc.
In 1940 he published an anti-French and pro-Nazi volume, ''Le Crime des evacuations ; Les horreurs que nous avons vues,'' in which he praised the Nazis for their helpfulness to the French war refugees.〔Jean de La Hire, ''Le Crime des evacuations; Les horreurs que nous avons vues'', Paris: Editions Tallandier, 1940, pp.132-34.〕

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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